The African Business Aviation Association (AfBAA) is exhibiting here at EBACE again (Booth Y140), for what will be the fourth year in a row according to Rady Fahmy, the associationâs executive director. An Egyptian who lives in Canada, Fahmy says he is shuttling to various places in Africa every few weeks, and despite not having an aviation background, believes heâs really found his forte heading up AfBAA.
âI started out in finance at Morgan Stanley and then went into IT in Cairo, then moved into aviation as a business consultant,â he told AIN. There he found that his background was very useful, given that âthe fundamentals of business are pretty much standard.â
Reflecting on how African business aviation has developed since he started (and AfBAA was established) in 2012, Fahmy said that, back then, âAfrica was a hotbed of growthâ in the sector. âOil prices were at an all-time high and business aviation grew, as a result.
âThe fundamentals are thereâAfrica needs business aviation for its entrepreneurs, oil & gas industry and medevac because it doesnât have a well developed infrastructure. So itâs a good partner. But the continent is immense and many areas are not yet served, even by business aviation.â
Forward-wind to 2016 and many OEMs are now seeing Africa as âthe last resort,â said Fahmy. âA lot of the optimism went away as the rate of growth has slowedâbut weâre not seeing a bubble in expectations that will burst like it has in China.â
While Fahmy admits Africa can be viewed as four or five distinct areas, and many talk about it as âNorth Africaâ and âSub-Saharan Africaâ, he said that AfBAA is âdiscouragingâ these characterizations and wants to look at the continent as one place. âA business aviation person from Egypt is similar to a South African one,â he said. âAnd weâve come to the realization that there is a lot of potential looking [to South Africa] too.â He said that heâd started to form a good bond with the Civil Aviation Association of Southern Africa (CASAA).
âAfrica is a difficult market,â admitted Fahmy
. âI think the lull situation is there and a few OEMs are focusing less on the continent and more on two or three countries.â He noted that the main five are Nigeria, Egypt, South Africa, Angola and Kenya. âMorocco is in and out of the top five or six,â he added. The DRC has a lot of aircraft but âare more pre-owned.â
The continent also doesnât have very many FBOs. âWith the exception of a few, the vast majority are run by the state and donât seem to be interested in relinquishing [part of their] ground handling, fuel etc. We continue to lobby on behalf of FBOs to secure space [at African airports],â he noted, adding that there is no reason an FBO canât offer a similar level of security as the main terminal. âLet the passengers choose whether to go public or private.â
However, he agreed that there are a lot of places where government agencies are looking to better accommodate private aviation, even if they run the facilities. There is no private FBO that has yet received custom & immigration approval, although Fireblade at Johannesburg is hoping for this soon. âIf anyone is able to get C&I approval it would be Fireblade,â said Fahmy. âItâs coming,â he added, referring to this service eventually being available more widely at FBOs.
At EBACE this year, AfBAA has âThe African Pavilionâ with several African business aviation companies set up in one large area, which is bigger than in previous years, âand has a better position,â said Fahmy. âWe should benefit from a better footprint and be more visible.â
âWe are going to the exhibition to get awarenessâ among the 25,000 or so visitors. By being in one pavilion with AfBAA running it, member companies can also get around the show rather than being tied to their booths all the time. Six of AfBAAâs 105 members have participated in the coordinated effort, he said.
Fahmy said that AfBAA has its conference scheduled for November 17-18 in Cape Town, South Africa. The meeting is also going to be bigger than previous events and have some novel aspects, said Fahmy. The African Business Aviation Conference (AfBAC) will be âmore globalâ and also look at non-traditional areas, such as RPAS (remotely piloted aerial systems).
âThere are two things we are working on at the moment. One thing is data [on African business aviation, which they started collecting in 2014]. And our next endeavour is folding the UAV/RPAS business into our associationâwe in Africa could be in step with the rest of the world,â he said, pointing out that in some ways Africa can be ahead in areas such as cargo (as it was with mobile phone payments). âWe have established an RPAS committee and weâre going to have the first RPAS forum [in Cape Town].â