Christopher Thompson
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A NEW swathe of residential areas could be blighted by aircraft noise and pollution for the first time after regulators warned there is not enough airspace to cope with airport expansion in southeast England.
The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) and National Air Traffic Services (NATS) say expansion in the southeast “would not [leave] sufficient airspace capacity to accommodate the scale of predicted traffic growth on the basis of current and predicted technology”.
Families in the south Midlands and East Anglia face the prospect of planes circling above their homes if ministers proceed with plans to build new runways at Heathrow and Stansted.
Experts believe new queuing “stacks” will have to be created to deal with the overspill from London’s crowded skies. The capital’s airspace is already among the most congested in the world, with 1.4m flights over London last year.
A third runway and sixth terminal at Heathrow will lead to 225,000 extra flights a year by 2030.
The CAA and NATS warning came in a submission to the Competition Commission, which is examining BAA, the company that runs Heathrow, Stansted and Gatwick. The Guild of Air Traffic Control Officers said the new stacks would be in addition to a reorganisation of flight paths announced last month.
A Department of Transport spokesperson said safety was the Government's top priority and it had worked with both the CAA and NATS to develop proposals for a third runway at Heathrow.
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Anyone thinking we can just freeze everything is living in cloud cuckoo land. Face it, people will travel more and more in future. We can't keep the status quo. If we don't build more railways, roads or runways, all that will happen will be more and more gridlock/overcrowding/stacking of planes etc, to the point where people question whether it makes sense to live in the UK, and some businesses and people will start to leave, no doubt the more successful ones, leading the UK into a spiral of decline.
Build it and they will come, as a previous poster said; don't build it and they will go. It's either one or the other.
And as the oil becomes more expensive, it will become more worthwhile to seek out alternatives, but going back to a 1960s lifestyle where people travelled much less isn't going to happen.
Tim, London, UK
Marcus, clearly out there in China you have no idea what this is all about. The idea of more runways in not about easing congestion or making life better for passengers and airport neighbours - it is about attempting to make more money for the aviation industry. (Not UK plc as they want us to think. Look at the recent economic report commissioned by HACAN.) Don't be fooled. More runways = more planes in the sky, more noise and more pollution.
Christine, Heathrow villages,
In response to Ian referring to passenger numbers, the majority of movements are cargo and only going to grow, as will the number of business/commercial passengers.
As for more runways meaning less aircraft waiting to land, unforatunatley that overlooks two things. Firstly, 'if you build it they will come', and in numbers that cannot be coped with. Secondly, the increasing amount of aircraft in the skies complicates NATS terminal air traffic control procedures, hence why they believe turning SE England into one giant stack will be a necessity.
Andrew, Abu Dhabi,
More runways = more runways.
More planes = more planes. End of story.
Potential capacity is only that, POTENTIAL. If people don't fly in the numbers required, economics will limit the flights. Big stadia don't pull big crouds, it is what happens in them that does.
At least there will be less fuel burned on taxi and waiting for a take-off slot, and less burned while stacking to land.
We lament about extra lanes on the motorways, but we sloth along in the middle one and waste the extra one, cause jams, and waste so much fuel daily in unnecessary congestion that it makes aeroplanes jealous.
Ian, Gosport,
it is an inevitable phenomenon that is to happen in the future.people are more and more in need of the convenient and time-saving transportation while train and long-distance coach maybe die down gradually.what becomes more blank is ground.on the contrary, the sky is to be more congested with aircrafts even other vehicles to be invented in the coming days
samuel lv, Suzhou, China
It is crazy to build a third runway at Heathrow - not only is it totally out of sync with our general obligation to protect the environment, but the noise and pollution levels would be unbearable for millions of people. A new airport should be built in the Thames estuary with flights coming in over the sea. The total number of flights should be strictly capped and flights out of Heathrow / Stansted / Gatwick / Luton / City airports should be reduced. Build a proper high speed link from the new Thames estuary airport to London and on up to Birmingham, Manchester and through to Scotland.
Sam, London,
with another runway - would this not enable more planes to land sooner rather than have them circling waiting for a slot?
Gary Clayton, Wimbledon,
I love my country fervently(England)but wish we had more of a "can do" approach like the U.S.If we did there would be a fine new airport out in the Thames estuary by now.(Hong Kong has the knack,too!)
HD, WsM,
Maybe if the government actually had some foresight & invested in a highspeed rail network at affordable rather than rip off prices like many European countries we could at a stroke free up airspace that is made up of all those pointless domestic flights.
A Quinn, london,
When they were proposing terminal 5 at Heathrow they said no third runway. Now they're talking about a third runway and (it seems) a sixth terminal)
This is sheer madness. Do our politicians think that we have no memory, and that we don't see them as hypocrites. No wonder trust in Labour is so low at the moment
Rob, Birmingham, UK
Scottish PM now Head of UK Clearances. Take this idea back home Gordon.
Noise is terrible
Pollution a real health hazard
Danger from crash unacceptable
Ecconomic ruin as more money leaves UK than comes in
NO ONE has right to a job at the expense of wellbeing of others.
Heathrow should REDUCE in size, not expand
N Warren, E. Twickenham, Middx
It is sheer madness on several grounds to allow any expansion of flights. The planet is running out of fuel so we should freeze flight numbers and airport size at current levels. Do any of us really want cheap flights if the price is aircraft flying over all our villages and houses, let alone rocketing heating bills and food bills.
Enough is enough. I would be happy to stop travelling if this is the cost.
Madness
Michel, Guildford,
More runways = less planes in the sky waiting to land!
Marcus, Guangzhou, China