DAESP - Departamento Aeroviário do Estado de São Paulo (English: Airways Department of São Paulo State) was the São Paulo state (in Brazil) aviation department. DAESP was part of the Secretaria de Transportes do Governo do Estado de São Paulo (English: Transportation Secretariat of the State of São Paulo), and was responsible for the management of 21 public airports within the state, in accordance to directives from the National Civil Aviation Agency of Brazil (ANAC).
Company type | State company |
---|---|
Industry | Aviation |
Products | Airports administration |
It was created in 1963 as Diretoria de Aeroportos (English: Directorate of Airports) of the Secretaria de Viação e Obras Públicas (English: Public Works and Transit Secretariat). This Directorate was changed to DAESP in 1966.[1]
DAESP was extinct on April 14, 2022.[2]
Concessions
editOn December 26 and 28, 2012 the management of the three airports below was transferred to their respective municipalities:[3][4]
On March 15, 2017 the consortium Voa São Paulo was granted the concession to operate five airports previously operated by DAESP. They are:[5]
- Bragança Paulista – Arthur Siqueira Airport
- Campinas – Campo dos Amarais Airport
- Itanhaém – Antônio Ribeiro Nogueira Jr. Airport
- Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport
- Ubatuba – Gastão Madeira Airport
On February 16, 2018 the management of the airport below was transferred to its municipality:[6]
On July 15, 2021 all remaining airports managed by DAESP had their concessions auctioned to private entities. The winners were the following consortia:[7]
Consórcio Aeroportos Paulista, related to Socicam and Dix:
- Andradina
- Araçatuba – Dario Guarita Airport
- Assis – Marcelo Pires Halzhausen Airport
- Barretos – Chafei Amsei Airport
- Dracena
- Penápolis
- Presidente Epitácio
- Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport
- São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport
- Tupã
- Votuporanga
Consórcio Rede Voa, related to Voa São Paulo:
- Araraquara – Bartholomeu de Gusmão Airport
- Avaré / Arandu – Comte. Luiz Gonzaga Luth Airport
- Bauru / Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport
- Franca – Ten. Lund Presotto Airport
- Guaratinguetá – Edu Chaves Airport
- Marília – Frank Miloye Milenkovich Airport
- Registro – Alberto Bertelli State Airport
- Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport
- São Carlos – Mário Pereira Lopes Airport
- São Manuel – Nelson Garófalo Airport
- Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport
List of airports once managed by DAESP
editThe following airports were once managed by DAESP:[8]
- Andradina
- Araçatuba – Dario Guarita Airport
- Araraquara – Bartolomeu de Gusmão Airport
- Assis – Marcelo Pires Halzhausen Airport
- Avaré / Arandu – Comte. Luiz Gonzaga Luth Airport
- Barretos – Chafei Amsei Airport
- Bauru – Comte. João Ribeiro de Barros Airport
- Bauru / Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport
- Botucatu
- Bragança Paulista – Arthur Siqueira Airport
- Campinas – Campo dos Amarais Airport
- Castilho / Urubupungá – Ernesto Pochler Airport
- Dracena
- Franca – Ten. Lund Presotto Airport
- Guaratinguetá – Edu Chaves Airport
- Itanhaém – Antônio Ribeiro Nogueira Jr. Airport
- Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport
- Lins – Gov. Lucas Nogueira Garcez Airport Airport
- Marília – Frank Miloye Milenkovich Airport
- Ourinhos – Jornalista Benedito Pimentel Airport
- Penápolis
- Piracicaba
- Presidente Epitácio
- Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport
- Registro – Alberto Bertelli State Airport
- Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport
- São Carlos – Mário Pereira Lopes Airport
- São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport
- São Manuel – Nelson Garófalo Airport
- Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport
- Tupã
- Ubatuba – Gastão Madeira Airport
- Votuporanga
Top 5
editIn 2015 those were the top 5 airports according to number of transported passengers, metric tonnes of cargo handled, and number of aircraft operations:[9]
Number of transported passengers
edit- 1 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 1,109,809
- 2 - São José do Rio Preto – Prof. Eribelto Manoel Reino Airport – 691,559
- 3 - Presidente Prudente – Presidente Prudente Airport – 272,204
- 4 - Bauru/Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport – 143,015
- 5 - Araçatuba – Dario Guarita Airport – 108,993
Metric tonnes of cargo handled
edit- 1 - Bauru/Arealva – Moussa Nakhl Tobias Airport – 1,502
- 2 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 1,057
- 3 - Marília – Frank Miloye Milenkowichi Airport – 735
- 4 - Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport – 368
- 5 - Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport – 357
Number of aircraft operations
edit- 1 - Jundiaí – Comte. Rolim Adolfo Amaro Airport – 81,211
- 2 - Sorocaba – Bertram Luiz Leupolz Airport – 61,846
- 3 - Campinas – Campo dos Amarais Airport – 49,385
- 4 - Ribeirão Preto – Dr. Leite Lopes Airport – 46,360
- 5 - Bragança Paulista – Arthur Siqueira Airport – 37,121
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Sobre o DAESP" (in Portuguese). DAESP. Retrieved 22 September 2010.
- ^ "DECRETO Nº 66.663, DE 14 DE ABRIL DE 2022". Assembleia Legislativa do Estado de São Paulo (in Portuguese). 14 April 2022. Retrieved 19 July 2022.
- ^ "Administração dos aeroportos de Barretos, Lins e Piracicaba é transferida às prefeituras". Governo de São Pauo (in Portuguese). 28 December 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "Governo transfere administração do Aeroporto de Botucatu para o município". Governo de São Paulo (in Portuguese). 26 December 2012. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "Voa São Paulo ofereceu melhor proposta". Governo de São Paulo (in Portuguese). 16 March 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "Governo autoriza transferência do aeroporto de Ourinhos ao município". Governo de São Pauo (in Portuguese). 16 February 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
- ^ "São Paulo concede 22 aeroportos à iniciativa privada e prevê R$ 447 milhões em investimentos". Aeroin (in Portuguese). 15 July 2021. Retrieved 16 July 2021.
- ^ "Aeroportos". DAESP (in Portuguese). Archived from the original on 2017-11-03. Retrieved 23 October 2019.
- ^ "Estatísticas" (in Portuguese). DAESP. Archived from the original on 1 March 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2016.