Heathrow announces new measures to connect UK nations and regions to global growth

British Airways aircraft at Heathrow Terminal 5C
British Airways aircraft at Heathrow Terminal 5C (GNU 1.2 K. Iwelumo)

New package of commitments conditional on expansion enabling up to nine new air links to Heathrow and increased frequency on seven existing routes

New £10 million Heathrow Route Development Fund

A review of airport charges to help play our part in keeping existing domestic routes commercially attractive to airlines

Heathrow has announced a new package of commitments deliverable with expansion, designed to connect the UK’s nations and regions to growth markets around the world. Taken together they have the potential to deliver billions of pounds worth of trade and investment opportunities, reversing a lost decade of connectivity which has seen regional connections to long-haul markets squeezed out of the UK’s hub airport.

The move comes at a time when Amsterdam Schiphol has more links to the UK’s nations and regions than Heathrow and Gatwick combined. As a result, Schiphol has gained traffic that would otherwise support new long haul routes, jobs and economic activity in the UK.

The measures would boost the seven existing routes, offering the potential for better timed and more frequent flights. In addition, our analysis indicates that passengers would be able to fly from nine domestic airports not currently served by Heathrow, meaning that a total of at least 16 regional airports will have the opportunity of direct links to the UK’s hub.

The commitments include:

A review of airport charges to help play our part in keeping existing domestic routes commercially attractive to airlines from January 2016.
Establishing a new Heathrow Route Development Fund. £10 million in start-up capital for airlines to support five new routes for three years.
Partnering with UK airports, LEPs, Chambers of Commerce, national and regional governments to work with airlines to establish new domestic routes through Heathrow.

Working with government to re-designate public service obligation (PSO) routes to Heathrow, the only airport that can connect them to and through London to growth markets across the globe.

Working with any organisation that wants to operate Northolt as a satellite runway for UK routes until Heathrow is expanded.

The commitments announced today have been informed by the recommendations of the National Connectivity Task Force, set up in May 2014 with a remit to recommend how connectivity between the UK’s nations and regions and the major airports in the South East can be enhanced. They build on a previous announcement by easyJet that it plans to operate from an expanded Heathrow, competing on several existing domestic routes and providing new links to four airports across the UK.

Airports Commission analysis has already revealed that an expanded Heathrow will deliver up to £114bn in economic benefit outside London and the South East, double the amount that would be delivered by an expanded Gatwick.

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