Airports Company South Africa


Airports Company of South Africa Limited is a South African airport management company. Founded in 1993, ACSA operates nine of South Africa’s airports. The company is headquartered in the Maples Office Park in Bedfordview, South Africa.

History

All of South Africa’s airports used to be owned and operated by the state until 23 July 1993 when nine airports were reassigned to ACSA. ACSA was then owned by the government through the ministry of transportation.
In 1998, Aeroporti di Roma bought 20% of ACSA's shares for 819 million rands,. In 2005, Public Investment Corporation, a local SA company, bought the 20% shares back from the Italian group.
In 2006, ACSA was part of a consortium that won the bid to manage the Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai, India.
In 2012, ACSA signed a 20-year concession agreement to manage the São Paulo–Guarulhos International Airport in Brazil, a strategic alliance between two countries that organized the soccer world cup in recent years. The deal was signed through a consortium including Brazil's Invepar for 51% of the concession and at a cost of $9.2 billion.
In May 2016, ACSA finished installing a solar power plant near the Kimberley Airport as part of a broader plan to install solar farms in all of its regional airports.

Airports

The following international airports are operated by ACSA:
The following local airports are operated by ACSA:
On 25 March 2006 gunmen armed with AK-47s stole bags containing several million US dollars at Johannesburg Airport. Three ACSA employees and six other individuals were arrested and appeared in court in connection with the heist.