Turkish Airlines to create 4,600 new jobs for new Istanbul airport operations

Turkish Airlines to create 4,600 new jobs for new Istanbul airport operations

ISTANBUL
Turkish Airlines to create 4,600 new jobs for new Istanbul airport operations

Turkish Airlines and its subsidiaries will create nearly 5,000 jobs as the national carrier is set to move its operations to Istanbul’s new airport, the company chief has announced.

The flag carrier’s process of moving to the new airport will begin on Oct. 31 and last for some 12 hours, Bilal Ekşi told Anadolu Agency on July 14.

“Turkish Ground Services will hire around 1,600 people while Turkish Airlines will recruit nearly 3,000,” Ekşi said.

He added that Turkish Airlines’ cargo division Turkish Cargo will establish a new global logistics company in partnership with Chinese logistics firm ZTO and Hong Kong’s PAL AIR in September.

“In line with [Turkey’s] 2023 targets, our orders on 14 aircraft including four cargo [planes] will arrive this year. We will have 41 next-generation aircraft in 2019,” he said.

Turkish Airlines will make its first flights from Istanbul’s new mega airport to the capital Ankara and Turkish Cyprus as well as Azerbaijan, the company chief also said.

Turkey’s 2023 Vision, marking the centenary of the Republic of Turkey, sets specific targets for improvements in the areas of economic activity, energy, healthcare, and transport, including joining the world’s top 10 economies.

Ekşi said that after the establishment of this logistics firm, Turkish Airlines’ turnover from the company next year is expected to total $90 million.

On June 21, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s aircraft made the first ever landing at Istanbul’s new colossal airport, which is expected to formally open to air traffic on Oct. 29, Turkey’s Republic Day.

Upon completion, the third airport in the city—90 percent of which is already completed—will be the world’s biggest project built from scratch.

The new airport will be one of the three biggest in the world, with an annual capacity of 90 million passengers in the first phase.

In the second phase, which is expected to be completed in 2023, the number is expected to rise to 150-250 million.

With a multi-billion-dollar investment, Istanbul’s new airport will be home to the world’s largest duty-free shopping complex.

After completion of the first phase, the airport will have a capacity of 3,500 takeoffs and landings per day.

It will also include a 100,000 square meter residential area as well as a mega car park with a capacity for 25,000 vehicles, a 42-kilometer-long (26 miles) baggage handling system, and 143 indoor bridges for passengers.

Atatürk Airport,