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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 (68)

  • David Cohen says:

    I have to say this is classic UK.

    It’s been talked about for long enough that surely all of the options have been explored ad infinitum.

    This a key test of the government’s committment to block the NIMBYs and actually build something of national signficance. If they can’t get something agreed and delivery started then they deserve to be kicked out of office.

    However if they can get things going, that isn’t a classic fudge, that is going to be delivered, then they will earn my respect.

    Things aren’t looking good.

    • JDB says:

      The prospects are rather better here because the government doesn’t have to put its hands in its (empty) pockets for the project to go ahead. That makes it incredibly attractive for them in many ways so they will move heaven and earth to try and make it happen. It sounds as though they will even legislate to block certain types of potential legal objections but none of that makes it very likely the 2029 start date will be achieved and the NIMBYs will no doubt be able to delay matters and the greater good will be sacrificed at their altar.

      • David Cohen says:

        I hope so. However presumably there will have to be signficant further investment into/by TfL for the supporting transport infrastructure?

        Southern access to Heathrow via Airtrack (or whatever it’s called now), plus all of the supporting level crossing upgrades on the Staines line.

        Further Elizabeth line trains to add capacity and GWML signalling upgrades by Network Rail. Plus of course western access to the GWML.

        HMG and the DfT are going to need to put their hands in their pockets regardless.

        • Panda Mick says:

          “Southern access to Heathrow via Airtrack (or whatever it’s called now), plus all of the supporting level crossing upgrades on the Staines line.”

          There’s several level crossings that don’t need to be level crossings (Barnes could be shut tomorrow and the impact would be virtually zero) and Feltham has been removed a few years ago

    • Flying Bird says:

      I won’t hold my breath, especially with this government…..

  • ybrikm says:

    Imagine if we just got on with things

    • JDB says:

      We live in a democracy where everyone gets their say and that causes massive delay! Whether that’s a good thing or not when it relates to huge infrastructure projects is another question, but it’s the reality as at today.

  • Lux says:

    Super reporting Rhys, more of this please. I do miss my weekly dose of Flight International.

    However, easyJet leaving Gatwick? Sure thing Kenton. Crying emoji crying emoji!

  • Paul says:

    Heathrow is a hub and as such a significant proportion of passengers simply pass through. I don’t believe Heathrow publish the precise numbers (happy to be corrected) but it’s thought to be around 40%.
    It is utter madness that such a hub should continue to be located where it is with a low flight path over most of central London.
    If the transit passengers were removed Heathrow has plenty of capacity. Meanwhile no one, absolutely no one, transits LHR for convenience. It is a mess often involving buses and terminal changes. They do so because it’s cheaper than a point to point journey. Domestically more people fly with KLM via AMS or on the likes of QR EK etc.
    So any expansion of LHR does not help anyone outside the south east indeed it could be argued it doesn’t help the south east either. It will simply become more congested, more risky and bring disruption. Nor does it change the fact that it is appalling badly served by public transport save for those going to central London.
    I don’t believe expansion will ever happen. Opposition exists well outside the M25 along the M4 corridor. The gov may have a huge majority but its support is puddle deep and it cannot afford to lose the seats it won at the last election.

    • JDB says:

      When the proposal was put before Parliament before covid, it was actually very popular in the regions and in Scotland/NI as a third runway comes with a commitment for more regional services. Less popular with many Greater London MPs of course.

      The CAA publishes passenger numbers including transfers and it’s nowhere near 40%.

      • Richie says:

        The popularity in the regions may change when they get A321LRs/XLRs landing on their nearer airport runways offering more convenience.

    • Alex G says:

      Chat GPT is suggesting transit pax are about 22%

      • conspicuous-capybara says:

        My horoscope today said Sagittarius need to be aware that 27% of Heathrow passengers are in transit.

      • Ben says:

        Chat GPT just told me it is around 30%. Let’s hope none of the proposals have used AI in their assumptions…

  • Tim says:

    For approximately the same amount of money (£38bn), 117 airport projects were started in 2023.
    https://www.airport-technology.com/features/the-most-expensive-airport-projects-in-2023/?cf-view

    Given that the UK is beyond broke, can someone please explain how the LHR 3rd runway project is so expensive. Is the runway diamond encrusted??

    The Gatwick northern runway project is £2.2bn
    Manchester terminal expansion (tripling capacity) is £1.3bn

    Even these seem costly in many ways. I accept that laying tarmac for runways is much more complex and technical than say a motorway, but 6 miles of motorway would be about £180m, does it really cost an extra £2bn for the equivalent runway + taxiways?

    It would be intriguing to see a detailed breakdown of costs in even just one aspect of these projects.

    My sense is that big infrastructure projects in the UK are all about minting new millionaires! Maybe I’m wrong?

    • Richie says:

      The risk registers may be more interesting than the cost documents.

    • Rob says:

      Heathrow gets a guaranteed return, annually, until the sun explodes, on every £1 it spends. It would literally install gold toilets if the CAA allowed it.

      However, I’m not sure if you’ve totted up the cost of demolishing two entire villages and probably 100 hotels or equivalent sized buildings plus tunnelling an 8 lane motorway whilst keeping it open. No way it gets done for under £50bn – which is fine for Heathrow.

      • Tim says:

        You’re right to say I’ve not totted all those extra costs up. It just feels that they also just stick a wet finger in the air and make it up.

        That’s why I gave the other examples which are clearer cut, it just feels that the key to getting big projects done is to price them astronomically high so that it’s beyond the scope of reason for the lay person.

        Any project that involves at least £1 of taxpayers money should have a full and transparent disclosure as to where all the money is going.

        Not likely I know… I’m off to start a new ‘brown envelope’ business! 🙂

        • JDB says:

          All the figures will be published in due course and you can look at previous projects to gauge the costs.

        • jj says:

          The government wants this to happen because its net revenues will rise, not fall.

          The development would be privately funded, so that’s cash-neutral for the government. One side of the ledger, the state might give some things away – improved roads or trains, for example – and there is always a grant to be applied for somewhere. But, on the other side, the government will receive massive tax revenues if the development goes ahead: income tax, corporation tax, capital gains tax, stamp duty, VAT, and import duties during the build phase, and, when it’s operational, also air passenger duty and business rates.

          A fair chunk of Rob’s £50bn will go straight to the Treasury. If you want the NHS to have cash, you should support the development.

      • JDB says:

        Plus more land and property yet to be acquired, including of course Waterside.

  • Alex G says:

    The Government needs to approve the fast and cheap second Gatwick runway without delay. An improved Gatwick would lessen demand for an expanded Heathrow.

    • BA Flyer IHG Stayer says:

      I thought it had done and it was only some fine details that needed to be agreed rather than the basic scheme.

    • Ken says:

      Agree

      I think this is the case of the perfect (Heathrow additional runway) being the enemy of the good.
      Expanding Heathrow just to suck a load of capacity from Gatwick seems nuts.
      I think the growth comes from point to point flights rather than hub and spoke.

      Would be interested in the detail of transit passengers going east rather than west.

      I don’t believe BA will profitably be able to compete going east with ME3 plus Turkish anyway.

      • Jonathan says:

        The ME3 and TK carriers are a tough match for BA, they make themselves more attractive for their onboard service when using narrow body aircraft, BA makes themselves a laughing stock for theirs

  • Kraut says:

    Can someone with finance experience answer this possibly stupid question

    With the RAB model, do the owners of Heathrow actually commit their own money/equity to invest in the new facilities or does it purely get funded out of increased user charges?

    • Rob says:

      A little bit of equity is going in, but the banks would be happy to lend it all because the Government effectively guarantees Heathrow gets enough money in to repay them.

  • Throwawayname says:

    Can anyone confirm whether the astronomical sums referenced which are ‘funded by passengers and not the taxpayer’ are intended to be exclusively funded by passengers at LHR itself as opposed to some UK-wide ‘airport infrastructure levy’ also payable by everyone flying from EMA, NCL etc?

    • JDB says:

      Yes, just LHR passengers. The airlines want a different but unspecified model. Not sure why they assume a review of funding would automatically be better for them.

      • Throwawayname says:

        Excellent, thanks. I’m still struggling to convince myself that the rest of the country really will be off the hook for this!

        • paul says:

          Of course it won’t. It would be a gret deal more honest if we sold LHR as a national treasure that was worth investing in. The problem is it’s not, it’s a cash cow for the owners and the cost of the taxpayer and those who use it.. As rob says if they could install gold toilets they would.

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