Examples of Airports Company of South Africa in a sentence
The Contractor will be appointed directly by the Airports Company of South Africa.
The Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA) was not given any assurance about the extent to which the provinces could advocate for airports to be built.
The PRC managed to meet with a number of stakeholders including major SOEs such as ESKOM; South African Airways; Transnet; the Industrial Development Corporation; the Central Energy Fund; PetroSA; and the Airports Company of South Africa.
The Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA) has proposed the construction of a filling station on a portion of the Farm Witkoppie 64-IR Portion 187 and Portion 197 within the OR Tambo International Airport precinct.
Considerable tracts of land are also owned by state-owned enterprises such as Transnet and its subsidiaries, Portnet, Eskom, Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA) and Denel.The challenge is not who owns the land, but rather how the land is being managed, because the owner and the developer of the land are often different.
A clause having that effect might per se be contrary to public policy.”the Gauteng Province only except that it should operate country wide in the following areas; V&A Waterfront; Growthpoint; ABSA Bank; Barclays Limited; Allied electronics Corporation Limited (Altron); Airports Company of South Africa; Telkom SA SOC Limited; Radisson Hotel Group; Drake & Scull and Moneyline.
The Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA) took a closer look at how they can improve their customer service at airports.
Airports Company of South Africa Act, 1993 and Air Traffic and Navigational Services Company Act, 1993.enables the company to levy airport charges and the ATNS permission allows ATNS to levy air traffic service charges, both permissions contain limits on increases in such charges.
This view is supported by the ABC judgment35 wherein the court had to determine whether a software program developed to enable the customer’s operating systems to interface with the operating systems of government agencies such as SARS Customs Division, the Ports Authority and Airports Company of South Africa to verify data relating to the import and export of goods constituted an internal business process.
GEPF also has strategic investments such as the 20 percent share in the Airports Company of South Africa (ACSA).