Fort Worth Business Press, June 2, 2014 Vol. 26, No. 22 | Page 10
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10 June 9 - 15, 2014 | fwbusinesspress.com
photos by alyson peyton perkins
D/FW Airport thinks globally,
prospers locally
Sean Donohue, CEO Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport, spoke at the Tarrant Regional Transportation Coalition’s monthly meeting in downtown Fort Worth.
n A. Lee Graham
[email protected]
A
s Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
spreads its wings overseas, its chief executive
promises that new international flights are
just the beginning.
Just six months after succeeding Jeff Fegan as
airport CEO, Sean Donohue shared those ambitious
plans at the Tarrant Regional Transportation Coalition’s June 4 monthly meeting in downtown Fort
Worth.
After American Airlines starts nonstop service from
DFW to Shanghai and Hong Kong on June 11, Emirates plans to offer flights on the Airbus A380 super
jumbo jet to D/FW Airport beginning Oct. 1.
“It’s important because Emirates is the largest international airline in the world,” said Donohue, confirming the North Texas air hub as one of only three
U.S. airports to accommodate A380 flights.
“As we connect the world to D/FW Airport, we
want to make sure we’ll have all the major carriers
serving DFW,” Donohue said.
The airport chief also wants to generate maximum
revenue. Qantas air service to D/FW Airport alone is
expected to pump $200 million into the region each
year, Donohue said. Airline passengers provide that
cash infusion with meal and retail purchases, as well
as hotel room rentals.
Allowing the airport to compete on a national,
even international stage, are its seven runways, lack
of a curfew on flight times and ability to serve a high
volume of cu stomers.
“That’s really, really important. You have to be
open for business,” Donohue said.
More customers are discovering the airport’s
amenities every day as the airport continues to speed
Customs processing and use of automated kiosks for
passport checks, among other services.
“We are far ahead of most U.S. airports in deployment of these technologies,” Donohue said.
The airport’s role in the North Texas economy is no
secret. It employs more than 1,700, serves more than
60 million passengers each year and pumps more
than $31 billion into the North Texas economy each
year, Donohue said.
Half of that $31 billion is driven by cargo carriers
flying in and out of the airport.
“Airlines, be it commercial, passenger or cargo, are
looking for flexibility,” Donohue said. He credited its
many runways, 165 gates and position as the nation’s
largest airport in terms of capacity for adding more
carriers and more flights.
But success starts on the ground, where the $2 billion Terminal Renewal and Improvement Plan (TRIP)
has seen several terminals remodeled and and work
on others continuing.
“It’s our 40th anniversary. We have to update the
factory,” Donohue said.
Meanwhile, airport roads and parking garages
also are undergoing renovation. Upgrading
only six of the airport’s gates at a time
creates passenger headaches, which
Donohue promises will lessen.
“We’ll try to minimize the impact of
that.”
Before taking the reins in October,
Donohue was chief operating officer for
Virgin Australia and spent 25 years in
executive positions with United Airlines
before that. Not until he accepted his current
“It’s our 40th anniversary.
We have to update the factory.”
— Sean Donohue, CEO, Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
position did Donohue realize the importance of road
and rail in Dallas-Fort Worth.
“One thing I’ve learned in six months is just how
important the overall transportation infrastructure is
in this area. I’m not sure I’ve seen so much pavement
being laid in my life in any metropolitan area I’ve
been in,” Donohue said.
Highway access is essential for air travel, with
50,000 vehicles pouring into the airport daily, about
22 million customers driving to the airport each year
and 42,000 parking spaces at the bustling air hub.
“So it’s not just air services,” Donohue said.
Asked about commercial development on airport
property, Donohue offered conciliatory words for
Fort Worth and Dallas, which own the airport.
“We do not want to be attracting commercial development that would take away from Fort Worth or
take away from Dallas. We’ve just got to work in partnership to make
sure everyone’s
on the same
page.”