ECHNO POWER has completed a project for Dubai International Airport Project - its technical team was responsible for synchronizing for 14 electrical power generators.Â
Dubai's new international airport - Al Maktoum International Airport - will span 27-square-miles and will have 400 aircraft gates and five parallel runways. Itâs anticipated that the facility will handle 12 million tonnes of cargo per year. To do so, the airport will harness cutting-edge technology to maximize efficiency.
 This brand new âgreenfieldâ airport some 20 miles southwest of downtown Dubai was designed to become, in a not-so-distant future, the worldâs largest and busiest. The vision was â and still is â for a futuristic mega-hub, ensuring that the Emirateâs role as a major node of the global economy doesnât run into capacity problems anytime soon. Dubai Airports, the airport authority that manages both Dubai International (DXB) and the new airport, promises that when Al Maktoum International is finished, itâll be able to handle more than 160 million passengers per year as well as 12 million tonnes of freight.
  To put that in perspective, thatâs nearly 63 million more travellers than the worldâs current busiest airport, HartsfieldâJackson Atlanta International, handled in 2022 and nearly 100 million more than Dubai International. DXB, letâs not forget, is already the worldâs busiest airport outside of the US and Dubaiâs main international gateway.
A company spokesman from TECHNO POWER commented:
"Experience is valued more at our company. We at Techno Power have a technical solution for any project a client might have. Our technical solution engineers have employed their quality technical experience for more than 25 years. They have worked with various projects and under different circumstances. We always work hard to provide the best technical solution for our customers because we know they expect the best from us. We have technical solutions for low and medium voltage, synchro panels. We collect electrical generators data remotely and save them on the Deep Sea cloud or on a local database server."