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Thursday 18 July 2019 6:11 pm

Gatwick to use standby runway to increase passenger capacity

By: Alex Daniel

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LONDON - SEPTEMBER 20: The plane carrying Thai Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra lands at Gatwick Airport after having flown from New York on September 20, 2006 near London, England. Thaksin had been preparing to deliver a speech before the UN General Assembly in New York when news broke of the coup that ousted Thaksin September 19. According to the Foreign Office, Thaksin has not asked to meet Tony Blair or any other ministers during what has been described as a "private visit." (Photo by Johnny Green-Pool/Getty Images)

Gatwick airport has jettisoned plans to build an extra runway, instead opting to bring the standby runway into “routine use” by 2020.

The airport said it is readying a planning application to use the second runway alongside the main tarmac. This would increase capacity at the airport so as to serve around 70m passengers by the early 2030s, it said.

Read more: Gatwick Airport train station to get £150m revamp

Gatwick this afternoon published its final so-called master plan. It published the plan alongside a report on a 12-week public consultation, which finished earlier in the year. It showed strong support for “making best use of its existing runways”. This would help it “meet demand in the most sustainable way over the next 15 years,” it said.

London Gatwick CEO Stewart Wingate said: “This would be the biggest private investment for the region in the coming years, which would result in significant local economic benefits, including new jobs for the area.”

“Gatwick’s global connections are needed more than ever but as we take our plans forward, we must do so in the most sustainable and responsible way and in full partnership with our local councils, communities, passengers and partners.”

Gatwick hopes to use its standby runway rather than building an extra one (Gatwick)

‘Critical’ to meeting passenger demand

The plan involves scrapping the idea to build an extra runway, which would have served up to 92m passengers.

Read more

Judge rejects Gatwick Airport bid to block new relaxed runway slot rules

Gatwick Airport terminal bustling with travelers and staff under bright signage and flight information displays

Gatwick is the second-largest airport in Britain.

It will go back to the public for another consultation once it has submitted planning application for the standby runway.

Business group London First said building extra capacity at the airport is “a critical part of meeting passenger demand”.

London First director of Connectivity, Transport and Infrastructure David Lutton said: “Without further capacity at UK airports, increased passenger demand for improved long-haul and domestic connectivity will simply not be met.

Read more: After Gatwick, how do we prevent future drone chaos?

“Creating additional capacity at Gatwick by making the best use of its existing infrastructure is a critical part of meeting that need.

“Expanding aviation capacity is an economic necessity, but it can only happen sustainably if greater numbers of passengers arrive at airports via public transport.”

Read more

Gatwick expansion cleared for take-off, court rules

20m passengers have flown through Gatwick this year

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