Generated by GPT-5-mini| Nuevo Aeropuerto Internacional de México | |
|---|---|
| Name | Nuevo Aeropuerto Internacional de México |
| Nativename | NAIM |
| City-served | Mexico City |
| Location | Texcoco, State of Mexico |
| Opened | cancelled |
| Owner | Grupo Aeroportuario (planned) |
| Runway | planned 6 |
Nuevo Aeropuerto Internacional de México was a large-scale airport project proposed to replace Benito Juárez International Airport as the primary international gateway for Mexico City. Conceived during the administration of Enrique Peña Nieto and actively promoted by the Secretariado de Comunicaciones y Transportes and the consortium led by the construction firm Grupo Higa, the project attracted broad attention from international aviation stakeholders such as Airbus, Boeing, and the International Civil Aviation Organization. The proposal generated debate among Mexican political actors including Andrés Manuel López Obrador, civil society groups like Mexican Centre for Environmental Law, and financial institutions such as the World Bank and Mexican development banks.
Project inception traces to strategic planning debates following congestion at Benito Juárez International Airport and growth trends reported by the International Air Transport Association and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The administration of Enrique Peña Nieto advanced a national infrastructure agenda that included flagship undertakings such as the Tren Interurbano México–Toluca and the expansion of the Port of Veracruz, situating NAIM within a broader program involving actors like Secretario de Hacienda y Crédito Público and the Consejo de Desarrollo Urbano. Site selection focused on the Texcoco Lake basin near the municipality of Texcoco, State of Mexico after alternatives including Santa Lucía Air Force Base and sites in Toluca International Airport were evaluated by consultants including Jacques Herzog-style firms and aviation planners linked to FAA technical guidelines.
Design proposals featured a single, multifunctional terminal conceived by international design practices with references to works by firms such as Foster and Partners and concepts influenced by the Terminal 5 of London Heathrow and Beijing Capital International Airport. Planned infrastructure included six runways, a 743-hectare terminal footprint, integrated rail links to the Mexico City Metro and the proposed Intercity Mexican rail network, cargo precincts comparable to Tianjin Airport Economic Zone, and support facilities inspired by Singapore Changi Airport logistics. Technical specifications cited by proponents referenced standards from the International Air Transport Association and operational models used at Los Angeles International Airport and Amsterdam Airport Schiphol.
Construction plans confronted complex geotechnical conditions typical of the former Lake Texcoco basin, including high water table and soft clayey soils similar to challenges faced at Venice and Mexico City Metropolitan Area subsidence studies overseen by institutions like Instituto Politécnico Nacional and Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. Engineering teams proposed deep foundation systems, controlled compaction, and hydraulic reclamation inspired by projects at Tokyo Bay and The Netherlands polder engineering. Contractors and consortia, including firms linked to Odebretch (Odebrecht)-style regional contractors and global engineering companies, outlined sequencing, risk mitigation, and cost escalations in line with procurement frameworks influenced by World Bank guidelines and Banco Nacional de Obras y Servicios Públicos financing terms.
Environmental impact assessments invoked biodiversity issues associated with the Valley of Mexico wetlands, migratory bird routes connecting to North American Flyway patterns, and cultural heritage concerns involving nearby archaeological sites under the purview of Instituto Nacional de Antropología e Historia. Social impacts addressed displacement and land acquisition in municipalities including Texcoco, State of Mexico and San Salvador Atenco, with civil society actors such as Centro Mexicano de Derecho Ambiental and urban movements comparing outcomes to past conflicts like the Atenco protests. Critics referenced climate resilience frameworks from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and hydrological studies by the Comisión Nacional del Agua.
Financing models combined public investment from the Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público with private capital, proposed public-private partnership structures, and long-term concession schemes akin to those used by Grupo Aeroportuario del Pacífico and AENA. Governance proposals outlined operational roles for airport operators modeled on Fraport and Ferrovial concessions, regulatory oversight by the Agencia Federal de Aviación Civil, and bonds issuance strategies resembling airport revenue bonds used in New York City and São Paulo. Cost estimates became focal points in fiscal debate involving credit rating agencies such as Moody's and Standard & Poor's.
Planned operations envisaged long-haul and regional services by major carriers such as Aeroméxico, Volaris, Interjet, American Airlines, Delta Air Lines, Air France, Lufthansa, and Emirates, with cargo operators including FedEx and UPS. Slot allocation and bilateral air service agreements referenced frameworks under ICAO and the Chicago Convention, while intermodal passenger connectivity planned links to the Mexico City Terminal Aérea nodes and integrated customs facilities modeled on Heathrow Terminal 2 and Madrid Barajas Airport operations.
Controversies encompassed procurement controversies involving contractors associated with Grupo Higa, allegations raised in investigations reminiscent of cases like Operation Car Wash, environmental litigation initiated by organizations such as Greenpeace Mexico, and political disputes culminating in a public consultation led by Andrés Manuel López Obrador's administration. Cancellation in late 2018 triggered contractual renegotiations, compensation claims involving financial institutions like Banco de México and bondholders, and strategic pivots to alternate projects centered on Felipe Ángeles International Airport at Santa Lucía Air Base and modernization of Felipe Ángeles linked infrastructure. The aftermath influenced debates in the Chamber of Deputies (Mexico) and reverberated through Mexican public investment policy circles including the Consejo Coordinador Empresarial.
Category:Airports in Mexico