Basco Airport

Summary

Basco Airport (IATA: BSO, ICAO: RPUO) is an airport serving the province of Batanes in the Philippines. It is located in the provincial capital, Basco. It is one of two airports in the Batanes Islands, the other being Itbayat Airport.

Basco Airport

Pagtayaban ti Basco
Paliparan ng Basco
Summary
Airport typePublic
Owner/OperatorCivil Aviation Authority of the Philippines
ServesBasco
Opened1930; 94 years ago (1930)
Elevation AMSL89 m / 291 ft
Coordinates20°27′05″N 121°58′48″E / 20.45139°N 121.98000°E / 20.45139; 121.98000
Maps
Map
BSO/RPUO is located in Batanes
BSO/RPUO
BSO/RPUO
BSO/RPUO is located in Luzon
BSO/RPUO
BSO/RPUO
BSO/RPUO is located in Philippines
BSO/RPUO
BSO/RPUO
Runways
Direction Length Surface
m ft
06/24 1,244 4,081 Asphalt
Statistics (2017)
Passengers104,089
Increase 25.63%
Aircraft movements2,702
Increase 6.46%
Cargo (in kg)1,299,048
Increase 15.78%
Source: Statistics from eFOI[1]

The airport is classified as a Class 2 principal, minor domestic airport by the Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (CAAP), a body of the Department of Transportation that is responsible for the operations of non-major airports.

The airport is one of the hubs of Sky Pasada.

Although the airport in the past was briefly served by international flights, the airport is not officially classified as an international airport.

History edit

Basco Airport was first built in 1930 as Batan Airfield. During the Second World War, it became a target of Japanese forces during their invasion of the Philippines, seizing it along with the whole island on the first day of the Pacific War on 8 December 1941. Subsequently, the airfield was bombed by American planes in the closing months of the war in 1945, but the Japanese managed to hold on to it until their official surrender.[2]

Airlines and destinations edit

AirlinesDestinations
PAL Express Clark (resumes July 2, 2024),[3] Manila[4]
Sky Pasada Tuguegarao, Calayan
Fliteline Airways Itbayat, Tuguegarao
Aerospeed Air Transport Services Itbayat

Statistics edit

Data from Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines[1]

Passenger movements edit

Year Domestic Change
2003 26,065  
2004 26,933   3.33%
2005 25,376   5.78%
2006 22,748   10.36%
2007 19,550   14.06%
2008 24,288   24.24%
2009 19,308   20.50%
2010 26,089   35.12%
2011 28,428   8.97%
2012 25,588   9.99%
2013 32,467   26.88%
2014 60,683   86.91%
2015 73,541   21.19%
2016 82,853   12.66%
2017 104,089   25.63%

Aircraft movements edit

Year Domestic Change
2003 3,322  
2004 2,734   17.70%
2005 3,240   18.51%
2006 2,726   15.86%
2007 1,204   55.83%
2008 766   36.38%
2009 1,246   62.66%
2010 709   43.10%
2011 1,926   171.65%
2012 1,934   0.42%
2013 2,512   29.89%
2014 1,890   24.76%
2015 2,160   14.29%
2016 2,538   17.50%
2017 2,702   6.46%

Cargo movements edit

Year Domestic (kg) Change
2003 247,978  
2004 280,210   13.00%
2005 346,017   23.48%
2006 378,055   9.26%
2007 344,832   8.79%
2008 301,968   12.43%
2009 10,980   96.36%
2010 386,512   3,420.15%
2011 388,150   0.42%
2012 361,389   6.89%
2013 510,172   41.17%
2014 701,712   37.54%
2015 866,985   23.55%
2016 1,122,039   29.42%
2017 1,299,048   15.78%

See also edit

Notes edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Civil Aviation Authority of the Philippines (23 July 2018). "Yearly Passenger, Cargo and Aircraft Movements of all airports in the Philippines 1997–2017". Republic of the Philippines – Freedom of Information Portal. Retrieved 28 September 2018.
  2. ^ "Basco Airfield (Batan Airfield)". Pacific Wrecks. Retrieved 13 July 2023.
  3. ^ Cabuenas, Jon Viktor D. "PAL to restart Clark-Batanes flights in July". GMA Network. Retrieved 22 April 2024.
  4. ^ Liu, Jim. "Philippine Airlines Clark / Manila domestic network changes from March 2020". Routesonline. Retrieved 2 March 2020.