Close X
Thursday, December 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Porter sells terminal at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport to consortium

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Jan, 2015 12:59 PM

    TORONTO — Porter Aviation Holdings Inc. has signed a deal to sell its passenger terminal at Billy Bishop Toronto City Airport to Nieuport Aviation Infrastructure Partners GP, a consortium of infrastructure investors.

    Financial terms of the deal were not disclosed.

    Porter president and chief executive Robert Deluce says the deal will help the company strengthen its core business and help position it for growth.

    "Nieuport Aviation is a seasoned airport operator that will deliver exceptional service at the terminal and help build on the existing overall superior travel experience for passengers," Deluce said in a statement.

    Billy Bishop is the main base for Porter Airlines, which started flying in October 2006.

    Through its City Centre Terminal Corp. subsidiary, Porter has spent millions upgrading and expanding the terminal that saw more than two million passengers last year.

    Nieuport Aviation includes InstarAGF Asset Management Inc., Kilmer Van Nostrand Co. Ltd., Partners Group and institutional investors advised by J.P. Morgan Asset Management.

    "The terminal is a premier essential transportation infrastructure asset with an established operating history, robust contractual framework and positive long-term outlook," InstarAGF president and chief executive Gregory Smith said in a statement.

    Billy Bishop is a popular choice for business travellers because of its easy access to downtown Toronto.

    The sale comes as Porter seeks to expand its operations at Billy Bishop in a controversial plan that would see it start flying jets from the airport located on Toronto's waterfront.

    The plan requires extending the airport's runway at both ends by filling in part of Lake Ontario.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'Unstable' chemicals stacked floor to ceiling at Halifax cottage: RCMP

    'Unstable' chemicals stacked floor to ceiling at Halifax cottage: RCMP
    HALIFAX — Investigators in Halifax have found a variety of containers stacked floor to ceiling inside a cottage that contain "unstable" chemicals, the RCMP said Friday.

    'Unstable' chemicals stacked floor to ceiling at Halifax cottage: RCMP

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve
    WINNIPEG — The mother, father and stepsister have been charged in the violent death of a 21-month-old girl on a reserve north of Winnipeg.

    RCMP charge three people with killing child on Manitoba reserve

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing
    Kyle Louie was sentenced Thursday after earlier pleading guilty to manslaughter in the death of his 21-year-old brother, Reece Louie, on Feb. 19, 2011.

    B.C. Man, 26, Sentenced For Killing Brother In Alcohol-Fuelled Stabbing

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark says the low price of oil is an opportunity for British Columbia to bolster its needed pool of skilled workers.  

    Premier Christy Clark Tells Truck Loggers Low International Oil Prices Good For B.C.

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate
    One of two seniors arrested at a marijuana grow-op north of Kamloops, B.C., has been handed a six-month conditional sentence while another faces the prospect of jail time.

    One Senior Arrested At B.C. Grow-Op Sentenced While Another Awaits Fate

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North
    SASKATOON — A Saskatchewan group is looking to help families in Nunavut who are paying $6 for a can of soup and $200 for a turkey.

    $200 turkey: Saskatchewan group helps with food costs in North