The closure and severe reduction to overnight
movements at the majority of London's Airports this summer, in order to comply
with national and local Government noise contours, will have a major impact on
flights in and out of London, both commercial and charter.
BACA - The Air Charter Association, the trade
association for the air charter industry, is asking for a more pragmatic
approach to be made towards overnight airport operations in one of Europe's key
cities.
From 1st June to 30th September a
combination of night flight embargoes and the exceeding of noise quotas has
resulted in restrictions on movements between 23.00-06.00 hrs. being enforced at
London Stansted and, similarly, 23:00-07.00 hrs. at London Luton.
With Farnborough, Biggin Hill, Oxford and Northolt airports typically operating
until 10pm or 11pm during the week, Southend is now effectively the only London-area bizav
airport operating 24 hours a day, allowing limited movements to take place.
Business aviation drives investment, it allows
businesses to access markets which are not served by regular airline flights,
making companies competitive, more successful and, by association, create more
British jobs and more tax revenues. Luton Airport, at night, has traditionally
been the major backstop for the commercial meeting of East and West -
facilitating business and diplomatic missions, medical flights and ad-hoc
freight movements, amongst other vital connections.
Restricting overnight flights at London
airports simply puts the brakes on investment for British companies growing
overseas and on international companies investing in the UK, it also impacts the
movement of freight into key London airports. Statistics from the European
Business Aviation Association show that users of business aviation generate
nine-times the GDP of a user on a scheduled flight. The restriction is almost
directly related to late running airline movements and yet the impact sits
firmly on the business aviation, ad hoc charter and freight markets.
Aviation is vital for Britain, it contributes
over £22 Billion to the UK Economy annually and supports over 240,000 jobs.
People and freight travel 24 hours a day, seven days a week linking the UK to
the entire world, to place restrictions on these movements will have a negative
impact on trade and employment. The restrictions simply magnify a bad situation
particularly at a time when the UK needs to be increasing its international
connectivity, not reducing it.
British aviation actively seeks to minimise
the impact it has on its neighbours. It has reduced emissions with the latest
engine technology, lowered noise footprints through better operations, using
noise preferential routings avoiding as much housing as possible and yet at the
same time significantly increased the movement of people and goods.
Richard Mumford,
BACA's Chairman advises "Over the past decade aviation has made huge strides to
be a better neighbour, with significant leaps forward in technology reducing the
impact the industry has on the environment. As Luton Airport celebrates its 80th
birthday, the airport has made further moves to reduce noise impact, most
recently by some 50% with the introduction of new operational procedures for
arriving aircraft. Whilst we all understand that aviation cannot be silent, it
is vital to the development of our country and these continual impacts, which
affect businesses and freight significantly, need to be reviewed by the
Government as part of a joined-up aviation strategy for the country as a whole."
|