All of UK to benefit from new London hub airport

New four runway hub would provide a £2.1 billion boost and over 17,500 new jobs across UK

A new report by York Aviation and Oxford Economics highlights how a decision on where to build new airport capacity in the southeast is of paramount importance to every major city and region in Great Britain.

All of UK to benefit from new London hub airport Leading economists have calculated that building a new four runway hub airport would provide a £2.1 billion boost and over 17,500 new jobs across the UK.

Over the last 20 years the number of routes into Heathrow from domestic airports around the UK has fallen dramatically. As a result large parts of Britain are now without access to the UK’s main international airport and the links to massive overseas trade markets that it can provide.

The report demonstrates how a new four runway hub airport would restore those links and provide 49 more regional flights every day than a third runway at Heathrow would provide.

With a new hub seven cities and regions – Liverpool, Inverness, Newquay, Durham Tees Valley, Humberside, Dundee and Cardiff –  would gain new air connections to the London hub and seven cities and regions would see their existing connections improved.

The report illustrates how poorly Heathrow, where the number of domestic connections has slumped to just seven services, connects the nations and regions of the UK in comparison with European competitor hubs such as Schipol airport in Amsterdam.

A third Heathrow runway would fill up quickly due to underlying demand and pressure on airlines to use slots for the most profitable routes.

York Aviation managing partner Louise Congdon said: “There is no doubt of all the options for expansion currently under consideration by the Airports Commission, a new four-runway hub airport would provide the nations and regions with the best connectivity.

“This could include eight new regional routes and a more frequent service for cities that have a Heathrow connection currently.

“It might surprise some people that a third runway at Heathrow will do little to improve regional connectivity.”

Mayor of London Boris Johnson has publicly called for a new airport in the Thames Estuary.

Oxford Economics has calculated that the additional connectivity would lead to a £2.1 billion economic stimulus for the regional economies by 2050 in the form of increased Gross Value Added (GVA) and over 17,550 new jobs. This highlights the scale of economic benefit a new airport would provide for the whole of the UK.  The four cities/regions that stand to gain the most are:

  •          Edinburgh – £451m GVA (2,590 jobs)
  •          Glasgow    – £358m GVA (2,620 jobs)
  •          Aberdeen  – £346m GVA (2,810 jobs)
  •          Tees Valley – £220m GVA (2,180 jobs)

Mr Johnson’s chief advisor on aviation, Daniel Moylan, said: “This report highlights only a new four- runway hub airport can connect each nation and region of the UK to London and the rest of the world.

“The current expansion debate must not be allowed to become simply a matter of where to build a new strip of tarmac.

“This is a decision that matters to the whole of the UK and it’s ludicrous Amsterdam airport provides more than three times the number of UK regional connections than our so-called national airport.”

All publications and reports regarding the proposed new airport are published by Transport for London.

The Missing Connections Main and Technical Reports are also available at YorkAviation.