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BAM maart 2020

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€d_Modus Vivendi
0
en de futs voor straks

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Tartessos
0
Dow 27,090.76 1,173.35 4.53%
S&P 500 3,130.09 126.72 4.22%
Nasdaq 9,018.09 334.00 3.85%

Wallstreet FORS HOGER gesloten.
Belooft goeds op donderdag 5 maart.
€d_Modus Vivendi
0
quote:

Tartessos schreef op 5 maart 2020 07:49:

Dow 27,090.76 1,173.35 4.53%
S&P 500 3,130.09 126.72 4.22%
Nasdaq 9,018.09 334.00 3.85%

Wallstreet FORS HOGER gesloten.
Belooft goeds op donderdag 5 maart.
vergis je niet, ze hebben er een nachtje over geslapen;]
boldie
0
quote:

Tartessos schreef op 5 maart 2020 07:49:

Dow 27,090.76 1,173.35 4.53%
S&P 500 3,130.09 126.72 4.22%
Nasdaq 9,018.09 334.00 3.85%

Wallstreet FORS HOGER gesloten.
Belooft goeds op donderdag 5 maart.
voor Bam maakt het niet uit heeft verlopig maar 1 richting...
boldie
0
Bij deze stand indexen stond bam vorige week nog op 2. 62. Weer geen nieuws dus weer vrij spel shorters. Maar blijven hopen want eens..
boldie
0
Tja als ik nu nog ballen overhand zou ik vol long gaan maar helaas zijn ze verwijderd bij aankoop bam
€d_Modus Vivendi
0
quote:

boldie schreef op 5 maart 2020 08:35:

Tja als ik nu nog ballen overhand zou ik vol long gaan maar helaas zijn ze verwijderd bij aankoop bam
dan kun je nu hoog janken
boldie
0
quote:

€d_Modus Vivendi schreef op 5 maart 2020 08:37:

[...]dan kun je nu hoog janken
elk nadeel heeft weer zijn voordeel inderdaad maar juich liever met hoge toon
€d_Modus Vivendi
0
Heathrow may be grabbing the headlines, but it is not the be-all and end-all of a busy aviation sector with a promising pipeline of work

Amid Extinction Rebellion protests, international carbon-reduction targets and coronavirus travel bans, you might think the last thing airports are thinking about right now is expanding. But you would be wrong.

After six years of falling output, the value of the aviation building sector soared by about a fifth last year, according to data from the Construction Products Association (CPA), which predicts further growth this year and next. Heathrow was set to add more than 50 per cent to its capacity, although the Court of Appeal last week ruled that the government’s decision to approve the expansion of the UK’s largest airport was unlawful because of environmental factors, heaping more uncertainty on the project (see box, below).

The £14bn expansion would see the first full-size landing strip built in the South East since the Second World War – along with a raft of associated infrastructure works. But plenty of other UK airports also have ambitions to expand.

Manchester Airport is in the midst of spending £1bn on its own transformation programme with a new-look Terminal 2 set to open in phases over the next two-to-three years. Other work taking place through the Laing O’Rourke-led scheme includes building new aircraft piers and overhauling taxiways.

Work at Edinburgh Airport

Birmingham Airport has a £500m expansion plan for improvements to be made over a 15-year period. Mace was last year appointed as construction manager for the terminal expansion, representing the first phase of this work. Phase two is set to start in 2024 and include a connection to HS2 before the final phase gets under way in 2029 involving changes to the runway and aircraft stands.

Edinburgh Airport has a 25-year masterplan for growth, with Bam Construction winning the first phase of the initial terminal-expansion project in 2017.

Meanwhile, Leeds Bradford Airport has outlined proposals for a £150m replacement terminal.
A long time coming

“Airport expansion plans are in place at most airports around the country,” says Construction Products Association (CPA) senior economist Rebecca Larkin. The CPA’s latest forecast suggests that aviation work will grow by about 5 per cent this year and 3 per cent in 2021. The upward curve may seem shallow, but it could also represent long-term work.

“Birmingham’s investment, for example, spans 15 years to 2033, and Manchester’s runs from 2007 to 2030,” Larkin says. “While there is a pipeline of projects to expand terminals, create transport links and build more aircraft stands and taxiways, the impetus to growth is less marked if a selection of these medium-sized projects happens every year than if one large or super-project was taking place.”

Larkin points out that Heathrow expansion was first considered three decades ago. “The development consent order decision is not expected until 2021, and public opposition has been bolstered by growing environmental movements and the UK hosting COP26 in Glasgow in November. It is not unreasonable to assume that the industry isn’t even factoring Heathrow expansion into the long term,” she adds.
Heathrow: Court rules expansion illegal

The Court of Appeal ruled last week that the decision to approve the Heathrow expansion was unlawful, writes Caroline Wadham.

Following appeals launched by councils including the London Borough of Hillingdon, the mayor of London Sadiq Khan and green groups, including Friends of the Earth and Greenpeace, senior judges decided the decision to approve the expansion did not take into account terms included in the Paris Agreement on climate change, as it was required to under domestic legislation in the Planning Act 2008.

In May the High Court threw out claims for a judicial review on the basis that the agreement had no effect in domestic law.

However, last Thursday (27 February), the Court of Appeal called for government to undertake a review into the environmental impact of the project. It said that the third runway could go ahead, if it can show that it can meet environmental requirements, but judges noted that the government had seen a draft of its decision ahead of time and had not sought permission to appeal.

In response to the decision, Khan said the judgement is a “victory for Londoners and future generations”.

“The government must now finally see sense and abandon plans for a third runway at Heathrow. We really are facing a climate emergency and it’s about time the government started taking action to address this. I will continue to stand up for London by doing everything I can to stop a new runway at Heathrow Airport.”

A Heathrow spokesman noted that appeals against the project on the grounds of noise and air quality had been rejected and said the airport would appeal to the Supreme Court.

“In the meantime, we are ready to work with the government to fix the issue that the court has raised,” he said. “Heathrow has taken a lead in getting the UK aviation sector to commit to a plan to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050, in line with the Paris Accord. Expanding Heathrow, Britain’s biggest port, is essential to achieving the prime minister’s vision of a global Britain. We will get it done the right way, without jeopardising the planet’s future.”

The government will not appeal the judgement. A spokesperson for the prime minister confirmed the government’s position was to accept the ruling.

Even before last week’s court ruling, doubts had persisted over the future of the megaproject. Boris Johnson told MPs in February that there was “no immediate prospect” of construction starting on site. The prime minister has long opposed expansion: his constituency is just a few
miles from Heathrow and, during his tenure as mayor of London between 2008 and 2016, he publicly backed an alternative proposal for a new airport in the Thames Estuary.

Following the latest court ruling, the government confirmed it will not appeal the decision. This comes just weeks after the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) recommended a delayed opening of the third runway and a reduction in spending during the early stages of the project.

Speaking before the court ruling, Heathrow expansion programme director Phil Wilbraham insisted the airport was “going as fast as we possibly can” towards building a third runway, but stopped short of confirming whether the government had reassured him of its support.

€d_Modus Vivendi
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“We believe expansion is the right thing for the UK,” he said. “We are in regular communication with colleagues at the Department for Transport. We are working hard with them to connect the whole of the UK to global growth, and they are helping us to do that.” The tone of his response was more lobbying than reassured: “Expansion is incredibly critical – the European hubs are outpacing Heathrow while we are constrained. If the government is serious about making global Britain a success, we need to expand Heathrow.”

The airport was due to launch a consultation on its proposals in the coming weeks before submitting a development consent order application later this year. Heathrow admitted that the CAA decision had slowed down the project and reduced
the amount it would spend over the next two years ahead of planning consent.
Avoiding pinch-points

Civil Engineering Contractors Association chief executive Alasdair Reisner says past work in the sector remains a benefit when bidding for aviation projects. “It is a specialist sector with regulatory requirements around it so it is not an area for everyone,” he says. “Where you are operating live airside, it is not to be taken lightly. It is important to respect the working environment and you would assume previous experience is an advantage.”

Reisner calls for sensible planning with the number of major projects in the pipeline: “If all the proposed aviation projects go ahead, along with HS2 and other schemes, there is a realistic capacity challenge – it would be an enormous stretch on the capability of the UK market to deliver. Sensible planning is important. We must look to manage resources across project programmes to make sure we don’t get pinch-points where nothing happens.”
Mancunian ambitions

Like with road and rail, aviation capital spending is not all about the capital. The Manchester Airport Transformation Programme aims to create a “world-class guest experience” to cement the hub’s self-styled status as the “global gateway for the North”. A fully reconfigured Terminal Two will open in 2022, more than double the size of its predecessor and featuring an 83sq metre digital screen. Pier Two will open at the same time with capability to handle the world’s largest passenger aircraft, the Airbus A380.

A spokesperson for the airport says the project is being driven by demand: “We had the busiest summer in our 81-year history last year with more than 100,000 travellers passing through every single day in August. A more modern and efficient airport will allow us not only to meet that demand, but to do so in a more sustainable way while delivering an improved guest experience.”

Carbon-reduction measures planned at Manchester include fixed ground power points on all new stands, which will mean aircraft do not have to leave their engines running when parked. This is part of a broad movement to change the perception of airports as arch carbon villains. In February, a host of aviation industry executives signed a pledge committing to cut carbon emissions to net zero by 2050, alongside a 70 per cent growth in passengers. Although environmental campaigners poured scorn on the plan, claiming it would rely on carbon offsetting and the invention of new technology, construction industry figures backed airports and airlines to overcome sustainability obstacles.

“We are seeing the aviation sector waking up to the climate-change challenge,” says Galliford Try aviation director Sean Blackmore, who sees the sector as a strong one for the company over the coming years. “We are seeing lots of ambition from airports in terms of their plans, but we are not seeing those plans come to fruition just yet. Larger expansions need political support, which can take longer to come through.”

He calls for the government to make it clear that aviation growth is part of its strategy. “Some airports are at capacity,” Blackmore says. “We should be mindful that it has not just people, but goods that need to be transported. After Brexit, if we are trading outside Europe more, that could have an impact on what airports look like.”

Galliford Try has worked on a number of recent airport projects, including Manchester, East Midlands, Stansted and Gatwick. “As well as looking to improve flight capacity, airports are becoming destinations and many are improving their retail offering,” Blackmore says.

Workload in the sector can be sporadic, which presents problems for contractors. “There remains a challenge over key resources and immigration. The industry always finds it hard to attract people to areas that look less attractive on paper, such as manual work,” Blackmore adds. “There are also opportunities in modular, offsite construction using smarter design and more automation. The construction industry needs to embrace alternative ways of working.”
Specialist expansion

Careys Civil Engineering is working at airports including Birmingham International, Gatwick, Heathrow, Edinburgh and London City. Chief operating officer Bjourn Bigley said: “Last year was our biggest for aviation revenue, with major projects including 13 new aircraft stands at Edinburgh. It is an area of focus for us, a very interesting sector. We have strong long-term relationships and work alongside clients. “For us, a good project is working with a trusted client, which is where you go in with transparency and can come up with collective value engineering. We look for those opportunities: partnerships rather than competitive tendering.”

Bigley says working on airports is a specialist job. “The biggest challenge is working airside, delivering a project while planes are taxiing, taking off and landing as we work,” he says. “It requires cooperation with teams including security, engineering, operations and air traffic control. Exemplar project management is crucial.”

It’s a big year for aviation. With the raft of expansion plans at critical stages, almost 6,000 people have signed a pledge not to fly in 2020 amid increased fears for the environment, with the campaign targeting 100,000. The International Air Transport Association has warned that the outbreak of the Covid-19 virus could reduce global demand for air travel by almost 5 per cent this year.

Bigley expects construction workloads to remain high, however.“We have the largest aviation network in Europe and the industry contributes £22bn to the UK economy,” he says. “It is growing at a rapid rate to meet demand. Passenger numbers are growing.”
boldie
0
Ou nou 15 min groen nu maar weer eens bekende kleur opzoeken want heeft behoorlijk jump omhoog gemaaktvdus winstnemingen
Utreg1960
0
quote:

€d_Modus Vivendi schreef op 5 maart 2020 09:14:

en bloody red
Je wordt van die manipulatieve gijzeling toch strontziek!!
€d_Modus Vivendi
0
quote:

Utreg1960 schreef op 5 maart 2020 09:20:

[...]

Je wordt van die manipulatieve gijzeling toch strontziek!!
yep, maar FCtrechie maakt een hoop goed :)
boldie
0
quote:

Utreg1960 schreef op 5 maart 2020 09:20:

[...]

Je wordt van die manipulatieve gijzeling toch strontziek!!
zolang we geeen positieve geluiden horen bam vrees ik dat dit nog wel even gaat duren. Had toch iets meer verwacht moet ik zeggen maar dit wordt toch wel irrie
Utreg1960
0
quote:

€d_Modus Vivendi schreef op 5 maart 2020 09:21:

[...]yep, maar FCtrechie maakt een hoop goed :)
:-))) dat was wel ff lekker hoorrrrrr. ;-)
€d_Modus Vivendi
0
quote:

Utreg1960 schreef op 5 maart 2020 09:22:

[...]

:-))) dat was wel ff lekker hoorrrrrr. ;-)
als geboren 020-er was het ff slikken, het blijft toch in je dna zitten.
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