Boeing to set up servicing plant in Ghana to serve the continent

Adnan Adams Mohammed
The Chief Executive of the Ghana Investment Promotion
Centre, (GIPC), Yofi Grant has disclosed that Boeing, the American
multinational corporation is looking forward to having an establishment in
Ghana to service planes in the sub-Saharan region and Africa as a whole.
Speaking at the sidelines of the IEA’s Dialogue with the New
Patriotic Party (NPP) last week, Mr Grant noted that Boeing has already engaged
Ghana on plans to set up in the country.
Ghana in November 2019 announced its intention to re-launch
an airline starting with 787-9 Dreamliners. The country signed a memorandum of
understanding at the Dubai Air Show covering three of the aeroplanes valued at
$877.5 million according to list prices. Plans put in place by both parties
called for the airline to launch operations in the first quarter of 2020 and
take its first three airplanes directly from Boeing.
“We have had discussions of having an office in Ghana to
service planes in the sub-region and also in Africa. Those discussions are
ongoing”, Mr Grant, the Chief Executive Officer of the Ghana Investment
Promotion Centre (GIPC) said, adding that, “This is part of the numerous moves
by foreign corporations to have their feet in the country.”
The Minister of Aviation, Joseph Kofi Adda, recently also
intimated that, "There is a growing demand for air travel to and from
Ghana, and we believe the advanced 787-9 Dreamliner gives us an efficient and
flexible machine to launch a regional network and eventually serve
international destinations in the future,"
Adda says the carrier, to be based in Accra, would establish
the capital city as a strategic hub that serves cities across West Africa.
Future routes would include destinations in Europe, North America, and Asia and
the long-term plan is to open the airline to private investment and operation.
In 2019, the World Investment Report showed that Ghana
received the largest amount of foreign direct investment (FDI) in West Africa
beating Nigeria, with $3 billion in investments.
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