It was all meant to be so easy.
In May this year, the £250 million Saint Helena Airport was due to open and change the lives of its islanders who were accustomed to a five-day, 1,200 mile boat trip to the nearest mainland, southern Africa.
Flights had been booked for the journalists while even the UK’s Prince Edward had agreed to open the UK-government funded airport in the British overseas territory.
However, about a month before the event, the airport’s opening was indefinitely postponed after a test flight with a Boeing 737 revealed the risk of windshear was too great. It was instead decided that more data would need to be collected before the airport could fully open to commercial flights.
Even though the wait is ongoing, St Helena Tourism director of tourism Christopher Pickard said the island still desperately needs an airport if it is to develop a tourism strategy fit for the 21st century.
“A lot of the people who would travel here are cash rich and time poor,” he says. “People are used to making connections but they like to have it all flow through so they can do the travel in a 24-hour period.”
Although one route had been set up to the island from London’s Luton Airport via the Gambian capital Banjul and operated by Atlantic Star, Pickard said the key service had been a weekly scheduled service operated by Comair and using a 737-800 carrying up to 110 people from Johannesburg.
He believes it is this service the island is missing the most, adding: “We’re really not going out to market until we know there aren’t going to be any problems.
“The experts are all saying we need more data to look at. I think the first visitation will be to have small planes coming in here carrying 40 or 50 passengers and that will be in the next three months or so. Every plane that lands on the island gives them more data and a plane this week had no problems landing or taking off.”
Meanwhile, he has little time for the journalists who criticised the airport’s planners for not anticipating the windshear issue earlier.
“The problem is islands by definition don’t have a lot of space and finding the right place to build an airport is quite hard,” Pickard says.
“We had to fill in several gullies to make it fit; St Helena is so full of big gullies when you go round the island and there is nowhere in the middle of the island you could do it. It is not that flat.”
This article first appeared in Routes News