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Heathrow unveils its three-runway masterplan – what does £49 billion get you?

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Today, Heathrow (re-)submits its proposed masterplan for the third runway to the Government.

As everyone will know, this has been an on-again off-again saga for …. well, decades. Most recently, expansion was approved by the House of Commons in 2018, only to be snarled up in court battles through 2019 and early 2020.

In December 2020, the Supreme Court gave a final ruling allowing Heathrow to proceed …. but with unfortunate timing, as the aviation industry was still reeling from covid and forecasts for future passenger numbers all over the shop.

Heathrow unveils its three-runway masterplan
Heathrow, when the hamlet of Heath Row still existed

However, as the past few years have shown, demand for air travel continues to surge. Heathrow says it is on track for a record 84m passengers this year which will set a new record.

When Thomas Woldbye took over as CEO of Heathrow in October 2023 it gave the airport the opportunity to re-evaluate its proposals and ensure they made sense for the new operating environment.

With passenger demand seemingly there, Woldbye hinted in January that he needed Government support to proceed, saying that “We are the tactical executors on the plan but transportation strategy is a government issue.” Fortunately, Rachel Reeves was happy to comply and backed the plans.

So, we are back to where we started: the Government backs a third runway as a ‘Nationally Significant Infrastructure Project’ and Heathrow is ready to submit its plans. Note that this is separate to the £10bn, five-year funding settlement Heathrow is currently negotiating with the Civil Aviation Authority which does not cover any work on a new runway.

Here’s what Heathrow’s proposal looks like. It can be split into three parts, all three of which combine to allow the airport to grow to 150m passengers annually (a 78% increase) and contribute 0.43% to GDP growth.

Heathrow unveils its three-runway masterplan

The third runway – £21 billion

As before, Heathrow believes the best option for increasing capacity at the airport is the construction of a 3,500-metre long runway to the north west of the existing airport.

This is largely where Bath Road currently sits and crossing the M25 to the West. It suggests this would be operational “within a decade.” It’s hard to see anyone taking this timeline seriously and arguably it undermines the proposal.

According to Heathrow, the price tag is “the same as the 2014 investment of £14bn when adjusted for construction inflation in today’s prices.”

What are the benefits? A new 3,500-metre long runway would unlock up to 276,000 new flights annually (an average of just over 750 per day), taking total airport movements from 480,000 today to 756,000.

It is the only way of increasing the number of flights that can operate from the airport, with existing runways already operating at maximum efficiency.

There is no mention of where these flights would come from, but realistically a large percentage will be airlines moving from Gatwick and City. There is a discussion to be had about whether what is good for Heathrow (getting airlines to move across from Gatwick, potentially putting its future at risk) is also good for the wider UK.

Heathrow’s third runway proposal

Heathrow says it is open to considering a shorter runway “but the case must be made on how it can deliver the same operation, community and economy benefits as a full length runway.”

A counter-proposal by hotel tycoon Surinder Arora (owner of many of the airport hotels, and indeed some key pieces of land around Heathrow) for a 2,800-metre runway was announced yesterday for “under” £25 billion.

Arora’s Heathrow West proposal

A shorter runway might avoid some of the expensive construction costs as a result of overbuilding the M25, which would require realignment and widening this major road – without closing it – between Junctions 14 and 15.

Studying Arora’s proposal – which he calls Heathrow West – it’s clear that the shorter runway is inadequately served by taxiways, forcing flights on a long trundle around the western perimeter of the airport, adding to taxi-time and increasing congestion across the airfield.

Heathrow says a shorter runway would not necessarily be cheaper. Re-aligning it further to the east would require the airport to purchase an additional 1,300 residential properties with associated compensation costs.

The current plans require ‘just’ 750-odd houses to be purchased at ‘unblighted’ market value + 25% plus stamp duty and other moving costs. It says it would also increase noise for communities to the East of the airport.

The airport also notes that only Heathrow’s Northwest Runway proposal is backed by the Airports Commission and Government, and has survived years of legal challenges. Redesigning the third runway would incur risk of (almost certain) judicial review.

New terminals and airport stands – £12 billion

To accommodate all the additional flights that will be unlocked via a third runway, Heathrow needs to expand its passenger infrastructure. It is proposing to do so via two new terminals, provisionally named T5XW and T5XN. As the names suggest, these would be to the West and North of the existing Terminal 5 building.

The new Terminal to the West of T5 would act as the main arrivals and departures hub, connecting to the new Northerly Terminal underneath the airfield via (I presume) an air train.

At this stage, the number of new gates is not finalised (and would depend on the ratio of small and large gates for short and long haul aircraft) but looking at the diagrams this would at least double the 53 gates T5 currently has.

Heathrow unveils its three-runway masterplan

Demolishing, expanding and modernising existing terminals – £15 billion

Plans are already in place to modernise and rationalise the Heathrow Central area, which currently comprises Terminals 2 & 3 and the derelict Terminal 1, which closed in 2015. This would be delivered “in a two runway masterplan regardless of (runway) expansion.”

As I have written before, this involves demolishing Terminal 1 once T2’s new baggage system is in place and extending the main Terminal 2 building to the north. Terminal 3, the oldest of Heathrow’s terminals, would be demolished, with the exception of the four A380 gates in the 2006-era Pier 6.

Two new satellite terminals would be built: T2C to the East of T2B and T2D to the West, where Terminal 3 now stands. A new extended Pier 6 would also be sandwiched between T2A and T2D, as well as a row of remote stands to the West of T2D.

Again, the final number of gates is not confirmed but it seems T2 would at least double in size, which it would need to to absorb T3’s existing 28 gates.

The earliest much of this can happen is 2029/30. This is when T2’s new baggage system – which is being assembled in an underground bunker between the main terminal building and the satellite building – is projected to be completed.

I suppose it’s possible that work on the T2C satellite terminal could start before then, but given current timelines this seems unlikely. Terminal 2 will have to be extended before Terminal 3 is demolished in order to maintain the airport’s existing capacity. Only later will the Western section of the Central Terminal area be able to be redeveloped.

Heathrow unveils its three-runway masterplan

What happens next?

At £49bn, these plans are not as expensive as were speculated, with talk of costs spiralling into the £60bn range.

That said, given that Heathrow is guaranteed a healthy return on its spending by the CAA, which sets the fees charged to airlines, it is difficult to see any incentive to keep costs down.

Some of these projects – such as the £15bn expansion and modernisation of Terminal 2 – need to happen regardless of whether a third runway is ever built, given the state of Terminal 3. Even Virgin Atlantic – often a critic of Heathrow’s plans – is clamouring for a new home for the airline.

To put that into context, the third runway and the associated new terminals near T5 account for £33bn – or two thirds – of the overall masterplan.

Government ministers will now need to consider the proposal and inform Heathrow how it wants to proceed. Heathrow can then apply for a Development Consent Order.

Heathrow says it will need “sufficient comfort that the necessary policy changes (on airspace modernisation, planning reform and regulation) will be implemented before …. taking this proposal forward to a full planning application.”

It expects to hear back from Government after the summer. “Timing is crucial if it is to achieve the Government’s schedule of DCO approval by 2029.”

Even if approved, there will be further long discussions over who should pay. The Arora plan, and the model favoured by the airlines, is for the airport to be broken up and the extension and new capacity ring-fenced. New entrants would pay for the cost of the third runway, whilst the legacy carriers are shielded.

No-one is offering to fully fund the £10 billion contribution requested by TfL as a contribution towards the necessary rail and road links.

Comments (189)

  • SharonC says:

    More expensive (twice the price) and more disruptive than the alternative plan put forward by Mr Arora, who also puts forward a new terminal. Bet we can all put money on which one the government goes for though

    • JDB says:

      @SharonC – these proposals aren’t entirely comparable. The Arora proposal doesn’t include anything for the works in the CTA which have to be done anyway. The actual runway proposal on its own is expected to be about the same for HAL and Arora.

    • Michael Jennings says:

      Mr Arora’s new “T6” seems to be pretty much exactly the same as “T5XW” in the official Heathrow plan, and there are lots of planes parked in the diagram in the spot that the official plan places “T5XN”. Heathrow seems to be working on the basis of “If we don’t call it a new terminal, it isn’t a new terminal”.

  • HH says:

    How would TfL capacity (and road infrastructure) to Heathrow keep up with what sounds like a 50% increase in passenger numbers?

    • oldak says:

      Last paragraph:

      “No-one is offering to fully fund the £10 billion contribution requested by TfL as a contribution towards the necessary rail and road links.”

      • HH says:

        More a question of how than how much. Are more Elizabeth / Piccadilly trains going to terminate at Heathrow in future? Additional HEx services? Plus some of the local roads already struggle, let alone traffic on the perimeter road.

        • Rhys says:

          Western/Southern rail access would be a start and have been discussed for many years.

          • Andy Davies says:

            Believe the Western rail scheme got scrapped a year or so ago…

            Seem mad that it took so long to go nowhere considering it’s nearly all in a tunnel

          • Londonsteve says:

            Aye. Knock out HEX and use the capacity to provide trains via the southern route into Paddington run by SWR. Premium fares for boarding and disembarking at LHR would be a good money spinner for SWR, just as it is for TFL. It also does away with the capacity concerns on the Waterloo route and through trains have much shorter dwell times on the platforms. Moreover, it massively improves airport connectivity, serving to reduce the need to travel to the airport by car or taxi from the southern and western regions of England.

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          HEX will have gone by the time this happens.

          This releases train paths for more Lizzie trains. Not just the 4 that HEX uses but also the ones that the fast HEX trains block.

          Works to the Piccadilly line signalling will allow more tubes to run.

          • Michael Jennings says:

            If you were to bring the Western and Southern links back, having through trains at the T5 station would allow increasing capacity quite a bit more than this – having a train stop, pick up and out down passengers and continue going is potentially a lot quicker than turning the train around. You are still going to run into capacity constraints on the western main line. The Southern link possibly allows you to run a loop service from Waterloo to Heathrow to Paddington, although the large number of level crossings on the route into Waterloo killed that proposal last time.

            These things are solvable, but are also likely to be expensive.

          • Rob says:

            The Piccadilly Line signalling project is unfunded – the new trains arriving this year cannot run at anywhere near their full capability because the signalling has not been upgraded.

          • Nick says:

            It’s not simple to take out HEx and put in Crossrail expresses. For a start there’s no way for them to cross over from the north (where the tunnel portal is) to the south (where the fast line is), so either you stop everything going in and out of Paddington for every movement or you build another expensive tunnel for it. Then there’s the speed – the class 345s are only capable of 90 but the 387s currently on HEx can do 110, so you screw up the pacing for long-distance trains too.

          • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

            Rob but it could be funded as part of a package for allowing the LHR expansion

            And whilst the capital programme funding package for the next 4 years has been agreed (approx half a billion a year for 4 years) the actual detailed programme hasn’t been finalised. Plus these works don’t need to be carried out immediately.

            Nick – again not an insurmountable problem though, like Piccadilly line signalling the cost could form part of the expansion funding package.

            For both more trains and tubes running makes public transport more attractive to people to use

  • Andrew. says:

    Ah. There we have it.

    The moment that an protester defaults to using the term “White Elephant”, you know that the project will be a success.

  • Dan Carey says:

    Ah yes, Mr Arora back at the government trough again — this time with a conveniently placed “alternative” runway plan that just happens to sit on land he owns. Let’s not forget, Arora Group was handed quarantine hotel contracts during COVID (after some cosy meetings with ministers, no less). I’m sure this latest proposal — complete with new terminals and property acquisitions — will deliver yet another tidy return. I guess he needs another idea since his proposal to turn his hotels into immigration centres failed.

    • Rob says:

      He cashes in anyway – all the land between T5 and the M25 is his.

    • Tariq says:

      At least we know he can make it happen. Demonstrably, he’s not concerned about planning consent…

      • JDB says:

        Except that Mr Arora is putting forward a project to be built on land that mainly isn’t his and for a shorter runway that doesn’t have the consents the longer one already has. Oh, and he doesn’t any money to fund the project, nor any track record of building anything on this scale to raise external funding.

      • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

        He’s responding to a government consultation that asked for proposals

        Anyone could have submitted plans without actually owning any of the land or having any money o do any actual construction.

        • JDB says:

          Yes, but isn’t it rather questionable as to whether his project is actually deliverable? Who will stand behind his project if it goes awry?

          • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

            That’s a separate issue though,

            The purpose of the consultation was to generate proposals and ideas for expansion.

            There are probably elements of the arora scheme that HAL might well want to look at as alternative to their own ideas.

            After all good ideas can come from anywhere and organisations shouldn’t be too precious about sources.

  • paul says:

    Now, if they could just build a fast railway connection between London and Birmingham they could make Birmingham airport bigger instead of Heathrow.

    I wonder if the figures are available showing the % of UK passengers forced to use LHR who live within 1 hour of BHX.

    • Andy Davies says:

      There’s no room at Birmingham, it’s an airport that’s in the wrong place…

      • Throwawayname says:

        I don’t agree, the airport is currently handling a lot more passengers in the morning than during the rest of the day so there’s definitely already spare capacity,and I am sure that it can do a lot more with a bit of optimisation work.

  • mitchero says:

    Aiming for a 78% increase passenger increase during a climate crisis?!
    A truly shocking proposal that does nothing to mitigate emissions.
    And we wonder why climate protests are getting more extreme?

    • cin4 says:

      Couldn’t agree more.

    • Rich says:

      Sort China’s growth in electricity generation from coal fired power stations etc. and then let’s talk.

      The UK is not the problem, or really part of the solution apart from virtue signalling.

      • Mike says:

        This is correct, there’s single Chinese companies that emit more CO2 than the entire UK.

  • Max says:

    I’m intrigued by these GDP growth projections. Surely there are other infrastructure projects that would also contribute to GDP growth and actually better serve UK residents, eg. improved transport connectivity within and between cities.

    • Rhys says:

      …nobody is stopping those being developed, either. That’s the point – they say this is privately funded.

    • BBbetter says:

      They are not mutually exclusive. The heathrow expansion is funded by LHR and in turn will be paid mostly by airlines and pax, except probably the TfL part.
      This doesnt stop government connecting the northern cities with a reliable modern railway line. An Elizabeth line in the north is badly needed.

    • JDB says:

      @Max – there are plenty of other infrastructure projects trust need doing, but you may not have noticed that the British state has both run out of money to fund such projects and has demonstrated that it is incapable of managing them anyway.

      We are also a small island which is quite densely populated in key areas where better connectivity is required and have a democratic and legal system that allows objections and nimbyism not tolerated in other countries that steamroller local objections for the greater good of the country.

      The present government is unsurprisingly very enthusiastic about the biggest project around that they don’t have to finance.

  • cin4 says:

    I’ve still never understood why LGW don’t move the centreline of 08R/26L 10m to the south.

    • Jake says:

      Out of interest what would that do?

      • Andrew says:

        Gatwick actually already has two runways. The problem is that they’re too close together to allow simultaneous use. Moving 08R a bit to the south would allow use of both at the same time.

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          Which is what they are planning to do.

          They are shifting the the current “spare” runway (not the correct terminology but you know that I mean) to allow the necessary spacing.

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