Arab Times

UK backs new $22b runway at Heathrow

25 yrs of indecision ends

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LONDON, Oct 25, (Agencies): Britain on Tuesday gave Heathrow Airport the green light to build a new $22 billion runway, ending 25 years of indecision and vowing to boost global trade links following the vote to leave the European Union.

Heathrow, Europe’s busiest airport, had been battling with its smaller rival Gatwick for the right to expand, after successive government­s failed to decide where to build the first new runway around London in 70 years.

“After decades of delay we are showing that we will take the big decisions when they’re the right decisions for Britain,” Prime Minister Theresa May told London’s Evening Standard newspaper.

“Airport expansion is vital for the economic future of the whole of the UK.”

The project, one of the biggest infrastruc­ture programmes in Europe at 18 billion pounds, is now likely to face legal challenges and a final vote by lawmakers in a year’s time, meaning the runway can only open by 2025 at the earliest. May’s decision is one of her most significan­t since she took office in July and puts her in conflict with some senior ministers who oppose expansion over densely populated west London, including Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, whose electoral constituen­cy sits near Heathrow.

Drechsler

Biggest

Heathrow is set to lose its ranking as Europe’s biggest hub airport to Paris’ Charles de Gaulle by 2020. With only two runways Heathrow is limited to 480,000 flights a year compared with the potential for more than 600,000 flights offered by rival European airports with more runways.

According to a three-year study by Britain’s independen­t Airports Commission, a new runway at Heathrow would create 70,000 new jobs by 2050 and increase gross domestic product by between 0.65 and 0.75 percent over the same period.

The Confederat­ion of British Industry, an employers group, said the new runway would benefit companies across the country.

“Pressing ahead with key infrastruc­ture projects like this will provide not only a welcome economic stimulus, but will show the world that we are well and truly open for business as we negotiate our exit from the EU,” CBI President said.

Heathrow’s establishe­d links with emerging markets also strengthen­ed its case in the wake of Britain’s vote in June to leave the EU.

Heathrow is owned by Spanish infrastruc­ture company Ferrovial, Qatar Holding, China Investment Corp and other investors, and the bill for expansion will be paid for by the private sector, with the government expected to pick up the tab for some of the additional road and rail costs.

Aviation

The government said that the UK aviation regulator would work with Heathrow and the airlines to ensure the new runway plan is affordable and keeps landing charges paid by airlines close to current levels.

The new runway project, selected over a cheaper option to extend one of Heathrow’s runways or build another runway at Gatwick, south of the capital, has in the past been criticised by Heathrow’s biggest airline, British Airways, which objects to any big rise in charges it pays Heathrow.

The government also proposed legally binding noise targets to provide respite for local residents, many of whom oppose expansion due to worries over noise and air pollution.

“Heathrow stands ready to work with government, businesses, airlines and our local communitie­s to deliver an airport that is fair, affordable and secures the benefits of expansion for the whole of the UK,” the airport said in its statement.

London and southeaste­rn England need more airport capacity to meet the growing demands of business travelers and tourists. Heathrow and rival Gatwick, 30 miles (50 kms) south of central London, had offered competing projects that will cost as much as 18.6 billion pounds ($29.1 billion).

But those in the pathways of the bulldozers don’t see why their homes should be sacrificed, even if the country might need capacity. The issue was so toxic that politician­s created an independen­t commission to weigh the options — and it had decided to expand Heathrow.

It is up to political leaders and lawmakers to make the final decision, and authoritie­s had stalled for months. The upheaval prompted by Britain’s vote to leave the EU pushed the issue back further.

A furious public relations battle has raged, with placards all over London’s subway system, for example, extolling the virtues of Heathrow or Gatwick. The commission had already rejected other options, such as one backed by former London mayor Boris Johnson to build a new airport in the Thames Estuary.

“A new runway at Heathrow is really fantastic news, especially as the country has waited nearly 50 years for this decision,” said Paul Drechsler, the president of the Confederat­ion of British Industry. “It will create the air links that will do so much to drive jobs and unlock growth across the UK, allowing even more of our innovative, ambitious and internatio­nally focused firms, from Bristol to Belfast, to take off and break into new markets.”

Many business groups and unions had offered support for expansion, in part to keep jobs in the community. But it was far from universal.

Michael O’Leary, the CEO of budget airline Ryanair, supported expansion at Gatwick, one of the airports where his carrier flies from. He described the decision as an anti-competitiv­e “return to monopoly featherbed­ding at Heathrow.”

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