New King Shaka Airpot Gives Feathers for Birds

Wed, 17 Mar 2021
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New King Shaka Airpot Gives Feathers for Birds

Durban’s King Shaka International Airport is set to welcome its first arrivals at the beginning of May, just in time for the 2010 Fifa World Cup. Besides taking care of its human passengers, airport management is also putting the safety of birds high on its priority list.

The airport is situated 35km north of central Durban and forms part of the ultra-modern Dube Tradeport, which includes an import and export zone is expected to boost the economy of the region.

During the planning of the airport it was found that a visiting flock of barn swallows (Hirundo rustica), also known as European swallows, had built a nesting colony in the 35ha Lake Victoria wetland – right in the path of the approach to King Shaka’s 3.7km runway.

These migratory birds visit South Africa in the summer months to escape the cold of the northern hemisphere, where they breed in vast numbers. The tiny creatures cover the round trip between South Africa - some 12 000km - every year.

The Mount Moreland colony is the largest in the country with between 3- and 5-million birds. The colony reaches its maximum size by November each year and the birds stay until mid-April, when they begin the long haul back north.

Image: abrinsky Creative Commons License

During the 30 minutes or so before sunset the swallows gather in large numbers overhead, wheeling and swooping, before retiring to their nests hidden in the reeds.

This spectacular sight attracts bird enthusiasts from all over the world, who trudge through the ecologically important Lake Victoria wetland to reach the massive roost.

Birds and planes can coexist

The colony posed a serious conservation problem not only for the airport developers, because the safety of incoming craft could be jeopardised, but also for bird ecologists and enthusiasts.

At first the discussion focused on the possibility of destroying the reeds, but there was an outcry from organisations such as WWF South Africa and local and international chapters of BirdLife, who argued that destruction of the swallows’ summer roost would have a serious impact on their numbers in Europe. A new approach was needed.



Once developers realised that the birds were in the air for no longer than an hour at dusk and dawn, that their nesting area was nearly 3km from the end of the runway, and that only about 5% of the flock tends to stray into the flight path, they were able to come up with a solution.

A special radar system was built in the US, at a cost of around US$300 000 (R2-million), to monitor the birds’ movements and enable air traffic control to advise pilots of potential safety hazards.

The radar alerts air traffic control when unacceptably high numbers of swallows drift into the flight path. The airport’s bird and wildlife unit is also alerted immediately.

Because the birds are so quick to fly off and come in to roost, flights may be delayed or have to slow their approach for only a short time.

The system is up and running but must still get the green light from the South African Civil Aviation Authority. However, as the birds are scheduled for departure within the next couple of weeks, airport management will have a good five months to work out the finer details before they return in October.

Hi-tech facility

The R8-billion (about $1-billion) King Shaka International Airport is the first greenfield project of its kind in Africa and by the time it opens will have been under construction for a lightning-fast 30 months. The airport is named for the fearsome Zulu monarch who ruled the area in the early 19th century.

The airport is fitted with the latest technology and features a wide selection of retail and food shops. Ample foreign exchange and banking services are available, as well as car rentals.

A host of carriers, including all the local airlines as well as Emirates and Air Mauritius, will use the new airport, which can accommodate the largest passenger aircraft in the world, the Airbus A380.

Source: MediaClubSouthAfrica

Thumbnail image: Valter Jacinto. Creative Commons License