The Davies Commission looking at options for airport
expansion in the South East has reported (see HERE
[.pdf]), and it is at once bad news for those opposed to expansion of Heathrow,
where an additional runway has
made the shortlist, and London’s occasional Mayor Alexander Boris de
Pfeffel Johnson and his super whizzo idea of a new airport on the Isle of Grain,
which has not.
Er, cripes chaps ... oo-er ... yikes!
While Bozza tours the studios and splutters into his coffee,
and tells anyone in earshot that the only true way forward for London’s airport
needs is the proposal favoured by Himself Personally Now, he is missing the
simple facts of the matter: his pipe dream would be eye-wateringly expensive,
require a public subsidy possibly north of £60 billion, and as a result
potentially an economic disaster.
Moreover, Bozza’s other favoured solution, a massive
expansion of Stansted, might abstract from other airports which have better
transport links, while its own connection to London would need significant work
doing on it (the rail link would need fully four-tracking at least as far as
Broxbourne, which means years of disruption and a lot more money). Heathrow and
Gatwick therefore come out ahead.
Heathrow Airport
Even then, there is a caution over the ability to get
passengers to and from Gatwick, with the report noting capacity limitations on
the Brighton main line, and congestion issues on the M25 and M23. Similarly, Birmingham
Airport does not make the short list, as HS2 has not yet been built and so it
would be too distant. Then there is the problem of competition versus
coordination.
Davies notes that the New York Airports System allows
categories of flights to be concentrated at particular airports: short-haul and
business at La Guardia, and long-haul at JFK, for instance. With London’s
airports now run by independent and to an extent competing companies, this
approach is effectively unavailable. Thus the wonders of free market
capitalism.
The report also points out that it is not possible to move
Heathrow’s operations to the Isle of Grain without significant effect on the
population of West London, tens of thousands of whom depend on the airport for
their livelihood. Bozza’s new airport would be over 30 miles east of the
capital. Commuting time and expense would be prohibitive for many workers – if there
were capacity to carry them.
Heathrow, on the other hand, is well connected by road, rail
and tube, with Crossrail to come. The problem for Bozza, and so many Tory MPs,
is that they
have all declared their opposition. Well, fine: they want the capacity
somewhere to the East of London, they can persuade their private sector pals to
pony up for it. That won’t happen. Boris Island is an ex-proposal. It has
ceased to be. It’s a stiff.
It has run down the curtain and joined the choir invisibule.
It’s dead, that’s what it is.
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