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The battle for the future of Heathrow Airport is not just about a third runway

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The Government has received at least two – and potentially four or more – proposals for the expansion of Heathrow airport through the construction of a third runway.

Only two of the proposals have been made public, from Heathrow Airport Limited (the current airport operator) and Arora Group, a property company that owns several hotels and a large amount of land in and around Heathrow.

You can see my article looking at the HAL proposal in more detail here with a few references to the Arora proposal as well.

The battle for the future of Heathrow Airport
Arora’s Heathrow West proposed Terminal 6

Both plans will cost upwards of £25 billion, with Arora pitching its shorter third runway proposal as a more cost-efficient option. Heathrow’s own proposal comes in at £33 billion for the third runway and new terminals.

Comparing the proposals is a bit of a challenge. For a start, not all of them have been made public; my understanding is that there may be one or two others that have not been announced.

Even comparing the Heathrow and Arora proposals is a challenge with a lot of key information, such as eventual terminal configuration and number of gates, not yet public.

What is very clear is that there is a lot more at stake than just a third runway.

For a start, both groups propose a suite of projects. In Heathrow’s case it’s a third runway, plus new terminal buildings, plus upgrades and extensions to Terminal 2 in the Central Terminal Area.

Arora’s plans, meanwhile, call for a shorter third runway plus a new single terminal building west of Terminal 5 which would form an airport transport hub.

It’s clear that the Government’s request for proposals has resulted in multiple options with substantially different scopes.

But the timing of this project, with the Government hoping for spades in the ground by the end of this parliament (2029) has also kicked off discussions about the airport’s future as a whole.

Last week, The Times (paywall) revealed that Arora’s proposals included provision for a third party to operate the new Terminal 6 and third runway, rather than the existing owner of the airport.

It was a sentiment that Carlton Brown, CEO of the Heathrow West proposal and former chief financial officer of the Arora Group echoed on a phone call with me.

This should come as no surprise, of course. Arora Group is a founding member of the ‘Heathrow Reimagined’ campaign. Together with IAG and Virgin Atlantic, they want to reform the way the airport is regulated and funded.

The battle for the future of Heathrow Airport
Heathrow Airport Limited’s third runway proposal

At present, under a system dating back to the late eighties, Heathrow pitches its proposed passenger charges to the Civil Aviation Authority. Each five year funding period is negotiated between the airport, the regulator and its tenants – the airlines – based on the predicted costs and passenger forecasts.

In some cases, as we saw coming out of covid, this encourages Heathrow to underestimate the number of passengers it expects in order to target a higher per-passenger fee.

The latest five year funding period began in 2022 and the airport has just fired the starting gun on the ‘H8’ funding period to begin in 2027. It proposes a £10 billion ‘investment’ funded by a 17% increase in passenger fees.

Heathrow Reimagined says that the existing model is broken. On the same day that Heathrow revealed its proposals, British Airways CEO Sean Doyle said that “Today, Heathrow is the most expensive airport in the world” and that passenger charges would double under the airport’s £49bn scheme. “We continue saying that we need a change in the regulatory model in order to have a runway that can be affordable.”

Crucially, the campaign has not said how it wants the regulatory model to be fixed; it only calls on the CAA to conduct an “urgent and fundamental review” into how the airport is regulated and funded.

This is not just something that the airport’s customers are calling for. Heathrow itself admits that “an appropriate regulatory framework needs to be put in place – one that encourages growth and investment while remaining affordable for customers – to secure many tens of billions of private capital from equity shareholders and from debt investors.”

So on 18th July, the CAA commenced its review of the model, including considering “credible alternatives and different regulatory models used for other UK and international infrastructure projects.”

It means that, whilst the Department of Transport pores over pages of third runway proposals, the CAA is conducting a review of the fundamental operating model of the airport itself. After years of holding patterns, at least two major reviews are taking place at the same time.

The battle for the future of Heathrow Airport
Heathrow West by Arora Group

Of course, the way the airport is operated will have a crucial impact on how a third runway is funded. It seems key that the CAA makes a decision before the Government settles on its preferred proposal for a third runway.

The CAA says it is hoping to publish a working paper for consultation in the autumn of this year, which it says will “align with the UK Government’s timetable for updating the Airports National Policy Statement.”

This ANPS document is crucial for the third runway, as this is what sets out the Government-sanctioned means of expansion. It expects to run public consultations on the plans in early 2026, allowing it to make a final decision on the ANPS later in the year and, probably, allow for a Commons vote on the issue.

The bottom line is that there are a huge number of moving parts surrounding Heathrow expansion, not just around the infrastructure itself but also around the very way it works.

Of course, none of this takes into account what happens if a third runway is built. How will the newly-released slots be allocated amongst airlines? IAG and British Airways would want them to be handed out on a pro-rata basis, thereby maintaining its dominant holding (BA owns just over 50% of current Heathrow slots.)

I can only assume that other airlines – Virgin Atlantic included – have very different views. easyJet CEO Kenton Jarvis has already staked a claim for a substantial number of slots, potentially closing its Gatwick operation.

Any decision would have a major impact on the building works, as ultimately any new terminal buildings must be suitable for the new tenants. It’s no good building a new terminal designed for long haul operations only for it to be used by short haul airlines.

All these questions, and more, need to be answered sooner rather than later if expansion is to adhere to the Government’s deadline. Getting a new runway operational by 2035 will be no mean feat and requires a multitude of moving parts to move in lockstep.

Not something the UK has been particularly good at recently – but I suppose we can always hope this is the turning point?

Comments (93)

  • Phillip says:

    “It seems key that the CAA makes a decision before the Government settles on its preferred proposal for a third runway.”

    I would say each applicant would benefit differently from this and therefore it may be beneficial for some that the CAA’s decision comes later. The Arora group was making a separate bid again pre-Covid but without the third runway (only terminal expansion). Now they’ve added the runway.
    And let’s not forget, all of this is separate to the actual planning applications to the Planning Inspectorate which is also happening concurrently. The ANPS has already approved the proposal of a third longer runway; what is not clear is how the government is looking to update the ANPS.

    • barracuda says:

      The economics of this are not straight forward – there is arguably the lower total installed cost by not having to relocate the M25. Which does make the Arora model cheaper.

      But more importantly – regardless of who pays (the airlines and us the passengers) there are two fundamental issues that are ignored in the article:

      1) Heathrow is a monopoly and it has market power – the introduction of a separate terminal, operated by Changi, will create competition – this in the ultimate state will result in lower go-to-gate pricing for airlines and thus lower fees for passengers. This is exactly what is happening in NY with the Port Authority Owners Airports – under long term leases the terminals are competing for airlines on service offering and pricing.

      2) Regulation – Heathrow is in part the most expensive airport in the world because the CAA a safety regulator plays the role of an economic regulator when it is simply not equipped to be one. The RAB at Heathrow is perverse, the more money the airport’s shareholders spend, which the majority is all funded by debt, they end up inflating the cost of the airport, which in turn increases their return they are allowed to recover under the mechanism. They have 0 incentive to minimize construction costs, with airlines( and passengers) ultimately picking up the bill.

      Don’t believe me google, there is a reason Willie Walsh, Shai Weiss and others have called for the break-up of Heathrow and the regulation to change.

      • JDB says:

        HAL can’t just spend what it wants on inflating eg construction costs as these have to be approved by the airlines and the regulator. The more proximate reasons that Heathrow is on some casual analyses more expensive is that it receives no subsidy, pays far higher local taxes (business rates soon rising to £300m/pa) than comparable airports and has to fund services other airports don’t, such as all the policing, its own fire service, ambulance etc. The UK government’s public policy decision that airports must be funded by passengers makes it naturally expensive over and above the high costs of operating within Heathrow’s constrained site. None of that will change, however much Willie Walsh, Luis Gallego or Shai Weiss might shout. If they are seriously hoping for cash from government to reduce fees, I guess they haven’t noticed that the British state is now essentially bankrupt.

        • barracuda says:

          Yes the CAA has to approve the RAB, that does not necessarily mean what they are approving are the most economically valuable way of achieving construction/assets , it is widely agreed within the industry that the regulation is not fit for purpose, and that that there is incentive there to inflate construction costs.

          To illustrate this point – when BA installed self bag drop machines at T5 this was done at £40,000 a unit – HAL wanted £150,000 to install a unit.

          Simply put HAL is not incentivized to deliver for less.

          • JDB says:

            Indeed the currently regulatory system appears to have achieved the impossible – it’s disliked by airlines, the airport, passengers and even the regulator itself. It’s so unwieldy and slow yet still doesn’t really achieve its aims.

          • JDB says:

            I don’t know about the T5 self drop bag machines but there are plenty of examples of airlines challenging large items of expenditure and getting their own independent quotes/reports that come out with higher figures than the airport proposals. Both sides are very adept at spinning these things and not comparing apples with apples!

          • insider says:

            The example i found quite funny was the construction of a smoking shelter in one of the terminals – the final cost was GBP1.1m….

      • Phillip says:

        And have you seen the state of NY airports? The mere citation that “like they do in NY” should ring alarm bells left right and centre.

        I do agree on many of the points raised but again, one look at the Arora proposal and you can see that they haven’t even designed the taxiways properly! HAL claims that the M25 can be diverted swiftly with minimal disruption (but the benchmark there is that that part of the M25 is a mess for most of the day anyway).

        • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

          NYC airports aren’t a valid comparison as it’s a very different model.

          LGA has basically been rebuilt and now gets complements not brickbats.

          The JFK terminals are basically being rebuilt with the airlines controlling their terminals.

          I’m sure BA would like to have total control of T5 like it had at JFK T7 but it doesn’t,

          I’m sure the star alliance members would love to have a dedicated terminal that they ran but it’s not the model we have over here.

          • Phillip says:

            LGA gets compliments for what? My recent experiences are that the airport is still not really fit for purpose, both in terms of access/accessibility or how it’s run.

          • Rhys says:

            The whole point is that it’s the model Arora are pushing for.

  • JDB says:

    A third proposal is the same one as previously, a short runway put forward by the former Concorde pilot.

    Arora’s plan involves Changi as the operator of its proposed T6.

    While IAG/BA appears to favour Arora on the basis it is cheaper (which it isn’t) that appears to be on the basis they/their passengers wouldn’t have to pay for it! Not sure how that works. BA particularly doesn’t like the the HAL project half of which involves all the terminal work in the CTA which BA doesn’t want to pay for as it derives little benefit. It was fine when other airlines shouldered the cost of T5 of course.

    The government’s hope for spades in the ground by 2029 seems hopelessly optimistic.

    • Dubious says:

      To be clear, it’s Changi Airports International, not Changi. Whilst they are in the same Group as Changi Airport, it’s a different team of experts, with different objectives.

  • Nico says:

    I don’t understand how easyjet or any other LCC can shoulder those new aiport fees, even for other short haul flights, impact would be massive.

    • JDB says:

      It seems highly improbable that EasyJet would move its whole operation to Heathrow, but it’s certainly a very interesting comment which doesn’t say much for Gatwick as an airport.

    • chris w says:

      Heathrow has never been designed for low-cost carriers and never will be.

      • Rob says:

        easyJet is not a low cost carrier these days. Ryanair, Wizz …. yes.

        Kenton Jarvis, the CEO, is literally in Heathrow’s submission with a quote saying how desperate he is for it to happen and how easyJet will be moving in. This is where it will all start to fall apart because Heathrow is promising lower fares by opening up the airport to easyJet, but BA – the biggest current tenant – is desperate to keep them out and certainly isn’t willing to pay for a runway and terminal for easyJet as is currently proposed.

  • Rich says:

    What’s the difference between a terminal designed for long haul v. one designed for short haul? A slight difference in retail and hospitality offering perhaps, no double air bridges and a smaller transit area, but what else that is so fundamental?

    • JDB says:

      More stands, lower pax capacity etc. to reflect short haul aircraft. Wholly impractical of course. The Arora proposal envisages a separate terminal (6) whereas the HAL one envisages at least connecting buildings for easier transit.

  • BBbetter says:

    If the airlines are complaining about the fees, why not move to another airport? How does LHR remain slot constrained and slots being sold for millions when airlines complain about the fees? Surely if it was unprofitable, many airlines would’ve surrendered the slots?

    • barracuda says:

      Slots are traded between airlines at market prices – separate from Heathrow’s regulated income.

      Airlines cannot simply move – Heathrow has locational monopoly, access to skilled communities and workforce in the surrounding areas, excellent transport links, network effects from consolidating services at a hub (the UK’s only) and among partner airlines and sharing resources.

      From the CAA themselves: ” High levels of market power can allow airports to raise prices, deliver inadequate levels of service quality and scale back on investment. This can harm consumers, including by limiting the ability of airlines to offer choice and value to passengers”

  • Dan says:

    The airlines essentially really want tax payers to pay and not them.

    Maybe they should let Heathrow charge market rate for slots. Pretty sure prices would rise not fall.

  • Chris W says:

    Loving these aviation business deep dives Rhys – kudos to you for excellent journalism. Pop this one on your CV!

    I know it would never happen but it would be great if the people of Greater London could vote on which option they want:
    – HALs
    – Aurora
    – No third runway

    I would accept a democratic decision.

    I recall back in what, 2018/19? there was a lot of argument about whether LHR should get a third runway or LGW should get a second and which was more deserving, with one of the projects potentially being finished around now? What a joke. I wish they’d just cracked on with both options then as a post-Brexit “Britain is still open for business” show of faith. Now it’s “digging could start in 2029”.

    Realistically I’d be stunned if the first plane touched down on the third LHR runway by 2040.

    • James W says:

      People are far too stupid to make an informed decision. In this case, it is quite simply too complex.

    • JDB says:

      @Chris W – there are certain decisions where the general public cannot be relied upon to make a decision. The various proposals are highly complex as is everything around them including deliverability and financing. The average voter makes ‘democratic’ decisions based on little knowledge/information so to have a massive civil engineering project democratically decided would be a fiasco.

    • CJD says:

      Heathrow is arguably too important nationally to allow only Londoners to decide on its fate.

  • PeterA says:

    The idea of an LCC operating out of Heathrow is fanciful. I suggest easyJet are using the possibility it might happen to squeeze a better deal out of Gatwick.

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