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Fort McMurray International Airport

Fort McMurray International Airport
Aerial view of Fort McMurray Airport 2014.tif
Summary
Airport type Public
Owner/Operator Fort McMurray Airport Authority
Serves Wood Buffalo, Alberta
Location Fort McMurray, Alberta
Time zone MST (UTC−07:00)
 • Summer (DST) MDT (UTC−06:00)
Elevation AMSL 1,211 ft / 369 m
Coordinates 56°39′12″N 111°13′24″W / 56.65333°N 111.22333°W / 56.65333; -111.22333Coordinates: 56°39′12″N 111°13′24″W / 56.65333°N 111.22333°W / 56.65333; -111.22333
Website flyymm.com
Map
CYMM is located in Alberta
CYMM
CYMM
Location in Alberta
Runways
Direction Length Surface
ft m
07/25 7,503 2,287 Asphalt
Statistics (2014)
Aircraft movements 72,224
Passengers 1,308,416
Sources: Canada Flight Supplement
Environment Canada
Fort McMurray Airport Authority
Aircraft movements 72,224
Passengers 1,308,416

Fort McMurray International Airport (IATA: YMMICAO: CYMM) is located 7 nautical miles (13 km; 8.1 mi) southeast of Fort McMurray, Alberta, Canada. YMM is the largest airport in northern Alberta. It has daily flights to Edmonton, Calgary, Fort Chipewyan, Vancouver and Toronto through airlines Air Canada, WestJet, McMurray Aviation and Northwestern Air. Sunwing airline used to fly to seasonal vacation destinations in Mexico 2012-2015.

The airport is managed by the Fort McMurray Airport Authority, a community-based not-for-profit organization that has operated YMM since 2010.

The airport has seen a significant rise in passengers over the last 10 years due to intense development of the Athabasca oil sands. In 2014, YMM served 1,308,416 passengers, ranking it as the 15th busiest airport in Canada. As a result, a new $258 million airport terminal facility opened in 2014 that can accommodate 1.5 million passengers per year.

Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) established permanent service at the airport in 2013.

Early 20th-century flights to Fort McMurray were primarily float planes that used the Snye River, a waterway that linked Clearwater River to the larger Athabasca River (private float planes still use the waterway). The first landing strip for light planes was built in 1936 to connect Fort McMurray with Edmonton.


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