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Confirmed: Doncaster Sheffield Airport to close in October

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It was confirmed this morning that Doncaster Sheffield Airport is to permanently close at the end of October. Tui, the largest carrier, has already removed all of its holidays from sale.

The owner, Peel Group, will proceed with plans to turn the site into a warehouse complex.

The airport is well situated geographically to be a logistics hub and benefits from the ‘Great Yorkshire Way’ road upgrade in 2018 which connects it directly to the motorway network.

Doncaster Sheffield airport to close on 31st October

The warehouse sector has been exceptionally ‘hot’ in recent months, and there is now a major shortage of capacity in many places, primarily serving online retail. Asda recently sold its warehouse network to Blackstone for £1.7 billion in a deal which was only expected to raise £950 million.

The airport has confirmed internally that it has lost £170 million since it opened and, on current forecasts, will lose another £45 million over the next five years.

Head for Points had an exclusive in July when we reported that the airport would close on 31st October. The airport was claiming in public that a final decision had not been taken, but our sources on the senior team at the airport told us otherwise. We have never had so much criticism for publishing an article as we received from that story, with many people believing that we were exaggerating. Unfortunately for the airport employees involved, what we wrote was totally correct.

Peel Group acquired the former RAF Finningley site in 1999 and opened it as a commercial airport in 2005. Substantial sums have been invested in the terminal and airfield since that time.

Despite this, and despite the popularity of the airport in the region, the only airline with a base at Doncaster Sheffield is TUI. Wizz Air – previously the largest carrier at the airport – withdrew its aircraft in June, apparently in a dispute about fees.

According to Cirium data, Doncaster Sheffield was the UK’s 26th biggest airport in 2019 with 4,609 departures. Bucharest, intriguingly, was the most popular destination with 171 flights last year. Over Summer 2022, with Wizz Air pulling back, just 808 flights departed across July and August.

Peel Group has already had success developing an adjacent site to the airport, GatewayEast, which includes a recent contract to develop a 400,000 sq ft logistics and advanced manufacturing site.

Luckily for Peel, the vast amounts of money that the local authority spent on upgrading road links from the motorway to the airport have vastly increased the value of the site as a warehousing centre.

Robert Hough, Chairman of Peel Airports Group, which includes Doncaster Sheffield Airport, said in a statement:

“We recognise that this will come as a great disappointment to many. The intractable problem remains the fundamental and insufficient lack of current or prospective revenue streams, together with the airport’s high operating costs. Our employees have always been DSA’s greatest asset, and we are grateful to them all, past and present, for their dedication and diligence over the years. The immediate priority remains to continue engaging closely with them over the next few weeks. 

“As such, DSA will now begin a formal process of consulting with team members. We will do everything we can to minimise the impact of these proposals and work closely with local authorities and agencies to support our employees through what we know will be an extremely difficult period. DSA has remained in contact with the union on site throughout and we are committed to ensuring they are updated through every step of this next phase.” 

Comments (74)

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  • ADS says:

    I know there are stories that Peel are a hard company to do business with … but it’s amazing that they couldn’t resolve their dispute with Wizz. It almost sounds like Peel were quite happy to close the airport and to convert the site into warehouses. Did Peel even put the airport up for sale as a going concern ?

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      Can’t see any connections here either…

      “Luckily for Peel, the vast amounts of money that the local authority spent on upgrading road links from the motorway to the airport have vastly increased the value of the site as a warehousing centre.”

    • Craig V says:

      Peel’s approach is nothing new for them. Back in the 70s they tried to acquire Barton airfield (now Manchester City airport) and turf the flying club out, to create warehousing. They’re not good custodians of the Manchester Ship Canal.

  • Scott Garrison says:

    Perhaps the council should go and dig up the new dual carriageways and see how Peel get on with that!

  • Mutley says:

    or perhaps make it a toll road?

  • Steve says:

    This can’t be right. Liz Truss promised me she would keep it open not two weeks ago.

  • Hazel says:

    This was obviously part of their big plan! The airport would be a viable concern if they let it be otherwise you would not get people interested in making it so. Don’t let them get away with closing it. Very convenient that they have let the council pay for the new road structure.

    • Brian78 says:

      “Don’t let them get away with closing it”

      How?

      • Mike says:

        Traditionally, the easiest way was to not give planning permission for anything they want to build. I don’t know what the situation is here re: planning.

        • Lady London says:

          There’s a very big rat here about yet another transfer of public funds, aka taxpayers’ and ratepayers’ money, to private equity. Is this what’s called a pre-pack? was there any dropsy involved? property companies think and act longterm and I wonder how lucky they were.

          • JDB says:

            Peel is a family company, not a private equity firm. The term ‘pre-pack’ is usually used in the context of a company going into administration and then being immediately sold in a planned manner.

          • Lady London says:

            Oops I read Blackstone and made the wrong connection. Transfer of public taxpayers and ratepayers money to a private company, then. Same diff

        • Brian78 says:

          The airport will still be closed though regardless

    • Callum says:

      In what way is a multimillion pound loss making airport a “viable concern”? I’m sure you will claim they’re mismanaging it, but how exactly?

      • Erico1875 says:

        You need to be thinking pretty big and long term to engineer a £170M loss.
        I think its more likely luck that another use hss been found

        • JDB says:

          Well, Manchester Airport Group lost almost £700m in the two years to 31 March 2022, so not sure how the Doncaster loss was engineered and yes, we know that they think warehousing will be more profitable which isn’t entirely surprising vs having the costs of operating an empty airport.

    • JDB says:

      Are you seriously suggesting Peel built an airport, absorbed huge losses over a few years as part of a master plan ultimately to build some warehouses??

      • Will says:

        It’s not impossible to imagine some verbal agreement that they’d develop the airport and if it didn’t work out a green light would be given for change of use.

        I’m not saying they engineered a loss, but a low risk exit might have been tabled.

      • Thegasman says:

        They’ve done it already with the old Sheffield airport.

        Negotiated a lease for the airport (old RAF base) in 1997 with a clause that Freehold would transfer to Peel if airport was not profitable by 2007.

        They stopped commercial flights in 2002 after shortening the runway so it could only handle Embraer sized aircraft. Pocketed the freehold for nothing in 2007 then turned it into logistics hub.

        Peel cannot be trusted to act in good faith & I’d be gobsmacked if they weren’t up to their old tricks here.

        Get council to pay for upgrades to transport links, engineer departure of Wizz by demanding unreasonable landing fees, stick some OTT losses through accounts for exceptional items & suddenly it’s “non viable”.

  • Mike Hunt says:

    I urge you all to sign the petition to keep it open – over 100,000 signatures already

    https://www.change.org/p/save-doncaster-sheffield-airport-savedoncasterairport

  • Matt says:

    Does this give Humberside (HUY) the slimmest of chances to increase flight operations? As a regional airport down the road, surely there is an opportunity for them???

  • Filipino_Chino says:

    The staff new it was coming – my mother flew from DSA in August, went to the lounge via Lounge Key card, they had to charge for my daughter (6) – a quick cash in the hand payment and she was allowed in… really suprised.

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