Erbil International Airport

Airport in Kurdistan From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Erbil International Airport (IATA: EBL, ICAO: ORER) (Kurdish: فڕۆکه‌خانه‌ی نێوده‌وڵه‌تیی هه‌ولێر, romanized: Balafirgeha Navneteweyî ya Hewlêrê, Arabic: مطار أربيل الدولي), is an airport in the city of Erbil in Kurdistan Region, Iraq. It is one of two international airports in the KRI, the other being Sulaymaniyah Airport, with a third in Duhok being under construction. The current airport opened in 2005 and has one of the longest runways in the world.

Quick facts فڕۆکه‌خانه‌ی نێوده‌وڵه‌تیی هه‌ولێرمطار أربيل الدولي, Summary ...
Erbil International Airport
فڕۆکه‌خانه‌ی نێوده‌وڵه‌تیی هه‌ولێر
مطار أربيل الدولي
Summary
Airport typePublic
OperatorFederal government of Iraq (ICAA), Kurdistan Regional Government[1]
ServesErbil, Kurdistan Region, Iraq
LocationErbil
Hub for
Elevation AMSL1,363 ft / 415 m
Coordinates36°14′15″N 043°57′47″E
Websiteeia.krd
Map
ORER is located in Iraq
ORER
ORER
Iraq
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
18/36 4,800 15,748 Concrete
Statistics (2022)
Passengers1,862,854
Aircraft operations17,896
Source: ICAA,[2] COSIT.[3]
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History

The airport was built by the Ba'athist regime at the beginning of the 1970s as an Iraqi military base. The airstrip was used as a military base until 1991 by the Ba'ath Party regime as a result of United Nations Security Council establishing a no-fly zone over northern Iraq. After the 2003 US invasion, the Kurdistan Regional Government took over administrative rule of the region. On 26 May 2005, the airport was given the ICAO airport code ORER. Endowed with natural resources including oil, natural gas and other minerals, investment in Iraq has increased substantially since 2005. The city of Erbil has been a large recipient of foreign investments.[4]

Old airport

The old Erbil airport covered 7,000 m2 (75,000 sq ft), and was divided into departure and arrival halls. It had three gates and a 2,800 m (9,200 ft) long runway with an ILS system.[5] The Kurdistan International Bank, a Tourism Information office, the airline companies offices, duty-free shops, a cafeteria, and the Korek Telecom office were located inside the terminal.

The warehouse offered cargo space amounting to 4,320 m2 (46,500 sq ft) and consisted of an import and an export section. The cargo was handled by Dnata, a Dubai-based company.[5]

New airport

A newly built, US$550 million airport was opened on 5 July 2005.[5][6] The new airport is next to the old airport (previously a military field) and has one of the world's longest runways, 4,800 m × 75 m (15,748 ft × 246 ft) and is equipped for ILS CAT II operations.[5] The airport's new terminal has duty-free shops and currency exchange offices.[7] The terminal also has VIP areas for business jets, and there is a VIP terminal for visiting dignitaries and diplomats[6] for the purpose of achieving international airport standards.[8]

In 2010, Erbil International Airport had the least expensive aviation fuel in Iraq (at 83 US cents per litre).[9]

From 29 September 2017 until 14 March 2018, following the failed 2017 Kurdistan Region independence referendum, all commercial international flights were suspended.[10] The airport remained open for domestic, humanitarian, military, and diplomatic flights.[11] The Iraqi government has been operating the airport since.[1]

Drone attacks

The airport has been the target of numerous drone strikes by Iran-backed Shi'ite militias in 2021.[12] On 15 April, a drone carrying explosives targeted the military section of the airport. The section housed US-led forces, and no casualties were reported.[13] On 6 July, another drone targeted the same section of the airport and crashed near the airport.[14] On 11 September, two drones carrying explosives failed to reach the airport; one was shot down by C-RAM air defense and the other one crashed. There were no casualties.[15]

Airlines and destinations

Statistics

As of 2022, Erbil International Airport is the third-busiest airport in Iraq, behind Baghdad International Airport and Al Najaf International Airport. It is the busiest airport in the Kurdistan Region.

More information Year, Passengers ...
Annual Passenger & Cargo Traffic[43]
Year Passengers % Change Aircraft

movements

% Change Cargo (MT) % Change
2006163,619Steady4,894SteadyN/AN/a
2007275,183Increase 68%9,815Increase100.5%10,000Steady
2008302,000Increase 10%7,745Decrease21%14,500Increase 45%
2009356,850Increase 18%7,557Decrease 2.4%11,533Decrease 20%
2010449,536Increase 26%7,235Decrease 4.2%10,848Decrease 6%
2011620,365Increase 38%7,366Increase 1.8%17,864Increase 65%
2012947,600Increase 53%9,021Increase 22.4%27,488Increase 54%
20131,193,783Increase 26%12,229Increase 35.5%38,571Increase 40%
20141,565,998Increase 31%16,218Increase 32.6%33,527Decrease 13%
20151,665,701Increase 6.3%18,864Increase 16.3%22,742Decrease 32.1%
20161,814,272Increase 8.9%19,080Increase 1.1%23,462Increase 3.1%
20171,606,531Decrease 11.4%15,294Decrease 19.8%17,574Decrease 25%
20181,533,863Decrease 4.5%15,562Increase 1.7%16,505Decrease 6%
20191,909,785Increase 24.5%19,560Increase 25.7%23,899Increase 44.8%
2020506,263Decrease 73.5%6,054Decrease 69%18,826Decrease 21.2%
20211,247,113Increase 146.3%13,970Increase 130.8%16,473Decrease 12.5%
20221,862,854Increase 49.4%17,896Increase 28.1%16,566Increase 0.6%
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Incidents

  • On 6 July 2021, a series of attacks against the airport were reported, including drone and rocket attacks.[44]
  • Erbil Airport has been targeted numerous times during the Gaza war.[45]

See also

References

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