GMR Infra, Greek firm offer 480 mln euros to build Crete airport

Tunia Cherian Updated - January 15, 2018 at 03:23 PM.

resort on the Greek island of Crete

The only bid submitted to build an airport on the Greek island of Crete was priced at €480 million, well below the expected €850 million, sources close to the project said on Wednesday.

The bid was submitted last year by a joint venture of GMR Infrastructure and Greek construction group GEK TERNA.

“The financial offer was unsealed on Tuesday,” one of the sources told

Reuters on condition of anonymity. The winning bidder is expected to operate the airport for 37 years.

Greece has made several attempts to build the airport at Kasteli since 2010, but the country’s seven-year debt crisis has made it difficult to attract investors. One source said the evaluation process was expected to conclude next month. The country’s infrastructure ministry was not available for immediate comment.

The public-private partnership project, which the ministry had estimated would cost €850 million, will replace the ageing Heraklion airport.

Greece’s second-largest airport, it handles nearly 6 million tourists a year.

Tourism is an important revenue source for the struggling Greek economy. The country expects 27 million visitors this year, up from 25 million last year.

Published on April 12, 2017 07:16