Khaleej Times

Here’s why Heathrow’s runway is ‘50 years too late’

- Zainab Fattah and Manus Cranny

dubai/london — The UK government’s decision to expand London’s Heathrow airport is about “50 years too late”, according to the chief executive officer of Dubai Airports, which is building one of the world’s largest aviation hubs.

“Unfortunat­ely the bureaucrac­y in the UK seems to be the world’s most refined and the world’s most comprehens­ive when it comes to strangling infrastruc­ture projects,” Paul Griffiths told Bloomberg TV in an interview. “Whether they’ll ever build it or not we’ll just have to wait and see, but I don’t think it will be in the next 10 years.”

Prime Minister Theresa May’s government gave the green light to the £16 billion ($20 billion) constructi­on of a third landing strip at Heathrow amid a crunch in UK flight capacity. The first full-length runway in southeast England since World War II will allow the 70-year-old airport to handle 135 million passengers a year. The government is leaving open questions about how the runway would be funded and how long it will take to get built.

While approving the runway was “absolutely the right decision,” the UK’s track record on delivering projects on time and within budget isn’t “great”, Griffiths said. However, the project is vital to London and Heathrow will be able to “use every ounce of capacity that the runway will create,” he said.

Griffiths is leading the expansion of Dubai’s Al Maktoum Internatio­nal Airport, which is set to be the world’s largest, with an ultimate capacity target of 220 million passengers. The master plan for the airport’s second phase has been approved and the detailed-design work is under way, he said. — Bloomberg

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