Otago Daily Times

Greenfield airport an option

- MARK PRICE

THE idea of building a new internatio­nal airport for the Lakes District appears to be up for investigat­ion.

Yesterday, the group pushing for Queenstown Airport to be shifted from Frankton took heart from a single clause in a document issued by the Queenstown Lakes District Council.

The council’s ‘‘request for proposal’’ (RFP), published on the Government’s electronic tender service system, seeks consultant­s to assess the social and economic effects of airport developmen­t.

Under a section called ‘‘airport scenarios’’, moving the airport is listed as an ‘‘alternativ­e scenario’’ to the proposals put forward by the Queenstown Airport Corporatio­n (QAC).

The clause reads: ‘‘developmen­t of a new greenfield airport (out of district) and the associated closure of Queenstown Airport and no developmen­t at Wanaka Airport’’.

That is what Queenstown’s Flightpath 2050 group has been pushing for, and member David Jerram said yesterday moving the airport was ‘‘at least mentioned and not specifical­ly excluded, as had been recently stated’’.

On August 14, a council spokesman told the Otago Daily Times the assessment­s would look at the economic and social effects of the current [QAC] plans ‘‘rather than pursue more extreme suggestion­s such as relocating Queenstown Airport’’.

Asked yesterday if the greenfield­s clause in the RFP indicated a change of stance, Mayor Jim Boult said the clause did not ‘‘signal any change in position . . . rather a desire to ensure that a range of options are independen­tly investigat­ed and objectivel­y assessed from an economic, social and environmen­tal perspectiv­e.

‘‘. . . any change in position at this stage would be preempting the assessment’s findings and recommenda­tions.’’

Two QAC proposals are listed — expanding the air noise boundaries at Queenstown Airport to accommodat­e a maximum of 5.2 million passenger movements, and developmen­t of Wanaka Airport for domestic services ‘‘initially’’, with ‘‘capacity for internatio­nally capable jet services in the future’’.

Two other alternativ­es are listed: distributi­ng flights to Christchur­ch, Dunedin and Invercargi­ll Airports with ‘‘little or no growth’’ at Queenstown or Wanaka Airports, and no growth at Queenstown Airport and developmen­t of commercial flights at Wanaka Airport.

Mr Jerram said the importance of the greenfield alternativ­e being in the document came down to a scenario where it was considered growth should be constraine­d at Queenstown Airport and stopped at Wanaka.

‘‘If you do that, then the region’s got a problem and therefore you could look at doing an alternativ­e airport.

‘‘I don’t know whether we are right or not about an alternativ­e airport as the way to go . . . but someone needs to look at it profession­ally.’’

 ??  ?? Jim Boult
Jim Boult

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