Air Freight News

London Gatwick revives plan to open up emergency runway

Gatwick Airport will revive plans to bring its second, emergency runway into full-time use in a controversial expansion of the London hub.

The airport, owned by France’s Vinci SA, is the second-busiest in the world still using just the one runway. Its growth plans, previously blocked by the U.K. government, could add about 18,400 jobs by 2038, Chief Executive Officer Stewart Wingate told reporters Wednesday.

Gatwick faces objections from environmental groups and local residents about the additional noise and pollution, and will run a 12-week public consultation until the start of December. It will also have to consider the uncertainty surrounding the recovery in air travel from the Covid-19 pandemic, which led IAG SA’s British Airways and Virgin Atlantic Airways Ltd. to move flights to larger rival Heathrow.

Gatwick, located in countryside south of London, mainly caters for discount carriers, with EasyJet Plc operating about 45% of flights prior to the outbreak. 

Lengthy Process

“We expect to be back at pre-pandemic traffic levels in 2025 or 2026,” Wingate said. “There is a requirement to bring forward growth plans. We have to go through the planning process, then the procurement process and finally the construction process.”  

Gatwick is resurrecting the proposal even after the U.K. in 2016 endorsed Heathrow as the best candidate for growth. The hub in west London, Europe’s busiest before the pandemic, has long planned to build a third runway, but the proposal is in limbo following a court ruling last year that the government failed to take full account of the Paris Climate Agreement.

Gatwick’s project requires minimal changes to airspace and will reduce taxi and airborne wait times, said Bronwen Jones, the hub’s development director. It aims to get government approval in 2024 and start using the strip in 2029, Wingate said.

“We’re very confident that these proposals will stand up to scrutiny,” the CEO said. 

Bloomberg
Bloomberg

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© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

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