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Why is it so hard to move a runway 12 metres?


Tom Espiner, Faarea Masud and Sean Dilley

BBC Business

Getty Images A plane taking off from Gatwick's runway in 2025Getty Images

Expansion at Gatwick Airport has moved a step closer after the government gave the plan its tentative backing.

On the surface Gatwick’s plans look relatively straightforward.

In contrast to Heathrow, which wants to bulldoze houses and reroute the M25, Gatwick is proposing to shift an already existing runway just 12 metres north, and bring it into regular use.

Yet it still may not happen for years, or may not happen at all.

How did we get here?

Gatwick officially opened as an airport in 1958. It had one runway and an additional taxi-way, that was expanded so it could be used as a back-up in case the main runway was out of action.

It was never supposed to be for daily use.

In fact, in 1979 Gatwick’s owners signed a legally binding agreement with the local council not to build another operational runway for at least 40 years.

Now, though, Gatwick is keen to increase flights in and out, especially for short-haul destinations, by putting the back-up runway into regular use.

In the summer of 2023, it put in a planning application, including for additional buildings, flyovers to local roads and expanding rail links.

However, the centre line of a runway that’s in full operation, must be at least 210 metres from the centre line of any other runway.

The back-up runway needs to shift 12 metres northwards to meet that safety rule.

Map showing new position of northern runway and the new buildings proposed as part of the Gatwick development

How long would expansion take?

Just because the government has given backing in principle for the privately-funded £2.2bn scheme, doesn’t mean it is ready for take-off.

There is strong opposition to the expansion of Gatwick among some local residents objecting to increases in traffic, noise and pollution.

Climate campaigners oppose any airport expansion, pointing out that the extra flights will make it harder for the UK to meet its obligations to reduce emissions that are altering the climate.

And in January MPs called on the government to delay the decision on expanding Gatwick until current noise levels were monitored adequately at the site.

Emily Coady-Stemp/BBC Peter Barclay the chairman of the Gatwick Area Conservation Campaign with two large placards stating opposition to the expansion of the AirportEmily Coady-Stemp/BBC

Local residents have voiced opposition to the expansion plan

Gatwick has until 24 April to submit more information to support its planning application, and respond with measures, such as noise mitigation and having a proportion of passengers travelling to the airport via public transport.

Then there will be a fresh consultation on the plans, before the government makes a final decision on 27 October.

Even if Gatwick is given the go-ahead then, it could still face further hurdles.

“There remains the possibility that the final decision could be subject to legal challenge which would lead to further delay,” Paul Maile, head of planning and infrastructure consenting at Eversheds Sutherland, told the BBC.

“It is probable that it will still be several years before work is likely to start, at the earliest,” he said.

Will it actually happen?

Gatwick has previously said it believed the new runway could be ready by the end of the decade.

But there is still a reasonable chance it might not happen at all.

By 2030 there will have been another general election, and a different government could overturn any previous decisions. Planning permissions and regulations may change, and climate targets could be ramped up – all of which would put the project at risk.

It will also depend on what the public want, says Prof Tony Travers of the London School of Economics.

Politicians are “susceptible to public pressure” so sometimes choose to slow or cancel infrastructure projects like this.

While there are wider benefits of airport expansion, to the regional and national economy as well as the travelling public, those advantages don’t usually prompt people to make placards and write to their MPs. Living under a flight path, on the other hand, does.

Richard Threlfall, global head of infrastructure, government and healthcare at KPMG International, says other countries, which don’t have such strong democracies as the UK, can “just get on and do it”, when they want infrastructure built.

In the UK road bypasses, rail infrastructure, housing and other projects can be slowed or completely blocked, if enough people oppose them.

But this government has staked its reputation on overcoming opposition to projects that it believes will boost growth, indicating it wants to see airport expansion despite the objections.



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