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ACSA’S strategic role in unlocking AfCFTA’s aviation and cargo potential
The Star
|September 12, 2025
AIRPORTS Company South Africa's (ACSA) announcement of its R1.1 billion net profit for the financial year 2024/2025 represents more than a financial milestone, it embodies a transformative moment that illuminates the company’s evolving role as a critical economic engine for South Africa and the broader African continent (ACSA, 2024).
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This record performance positions ACSA at the nexus of continental integration efforts, particularly within the framework of the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA), where aviation infrastructure serves as a fundamental enabler of economic transformation. Through an emic lens, examining ACSA's trajectory from within the African development paradigm reveals how state-owned aviation entities can catalyse regional prosperity whilst advancing infrastructure renewal, employment generation, technological innovation, and inclusive enterprise participation.
ACSA as a Continental Gateway: Beyond National Borders
ACSA's network of nine major airports functions as strategic continental gateways, facilitating not merely domestic connectivity but serving as vital nodes in Africa's emerging integrated market.
The economic multiplier effect of aviation infrastructure is empirically substantial—research indicates that every R1 invested in airport operations generates approximately R6 of downstream economic activity (Oxford Economics, 2023).
This multiplier effect becomes particularly significant within the AfCFTA context, where enhanced connectivity directly correlates with increased intra-African trade volumes.
The company's commitment to R21.7 billion in capital infrastructure investment over the next five years aligns strategically with AfCFTA's vision of seamless continental trade integration (ACSA, 2024). Modern, efficient airports are indispensable trade facilitators, reducing logistics costs by an estimated 15-20% and expediting customs and age processing times by up to 40% (African Development Bank, 2023).
Dit verhaal komt uit de September 12, 2025-editie van The Star.
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