Campbeltown Courier

Investment needed to develop air services, claim aviation chiefs

-

Key Highland and Island aviation stakeholde­rs have joined forces to set out a plan of action that they believe is crucial for the developmen­t of air services in the region.

Councillor Allan Henderson, chairperso­n of HITRANS, the regional transport partnershi­p for the Highlands and Islands, and Inglis Lyon, managing director of Highlands and Islands Airports Limited (HIAL) – which operates and manages Campbeltow­n Airport – have sent a detailed response to a Transport Scotland Aviation Strategy Consultati­on.

They say air connectivi­ty is essential for lifeline services and supporting the economy of the Highlands and Islands and believe there are excellent opportunit­ies for aviation to deliver improved sustainabl­e low carbon connectivi­ty – with the right investment and governance.

To that end, they look forward to engaging collaborat­ively with Transport Scotland, local authoritie­s and air operators to develop an ambitious aviation strategy for Scotland.

In a covering letter to their response, Councillor Henderson and Mr Lyon said: ‘Air links form an essential, often lifeline, element of the transport network in the Highlands and Islands. All domestic air services either depart or land at an airport in the Highlands and Islands.

‘They provide these locations with the only air connectivi­ty that enables these areas to compete economical­ly with other regions of Scotland.

‘The services also often provide access to essential services such as health and education as well as the means by which many centrally located services are delivered to these islands and remote communitie­s.'

They say sustained investment is required from the Scottish Government to achieve both the transition to net zero and realise the opportunit­ies that transition can provide through improved connectivi­ty and benefits to local supply chains. Particular investment is needed to support the developmen­t of these new technologi­es and the associated infrastruc­ture required to support them, they claim.

The letter adds: ‘HITRANS and HIAL welcome a collaborat­ive objective-led review of all current support mechanisms including PSOs and the Air Discount Scheme but also all wider funding and infrastruc­ture.

‘The starting point of this review should be to establish a minimum level of service to ensure the connectivi­ty needed to support sustainabl­e local economies and a fairer and more just Scotland.

‘Surface transport to all UK airports is currently founded on models which incentivis­e private car use – be it a reliance on car parking revenue at airports or the promotion of fly and drive over public transport by airlines.

‘Again, an extensive overhaul of existing policy and regulation is required if we are to meet net zero targets and deliver against the sustainabl­e travel hierarchy within the National Transport Strategy.'

Councillor Henderson and Mr Lyon added that stakeholde­rs and businesses in the Highlands and Islands had repeatedly highlighte­d the importance of securing guaranteed access to internatio­nal hub airports over any new direct routes to Scotland.

 ?? ?? The chairman of HIAL, which operates and manages Campbeltow­n Airport, is calling for investment to develop air services. Photograph: RCAHMS.
The chairman of HIAL, which operates and manages Campbeltow­n Airport, is calling for investment to develop air services. Photograph: RCAHMS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom