Blair to attend launch of A380 – The Reality Behind the Myth

“Behind the glamour and glitz of the launch ceremony is the reality for residents. This plane will be one of the noisiest beasts in the sky.”

The A380, the world’s biggest passenger plane, able to carry over 550 passengers, which will be launched in the presence of Tony Blair and Jacques Chirac in Toulouse on Tuesday (1), will be “one of the noisiest beasts in the sky”, claims Heathrow pressure group HACAN ClearSkies. Airbus, the company that has manufactured the aircraft, claim that “it will make less noise than its closest competitor, while carrying 30-50% more people.” Nevertheless, airports will place it in their highest noise category. It will just meet the international standards for new planes (2).

The A380 will be enormous. It will be a double-decker plane, a third larger than a jumbo jet. It will replace the Boeing 747 as the world’s biggest passenger aircraft. Runways at Heathrow and the other major airports which the plane will use have had to be widened to accommodate it. It has cost over £6 billion to develop. The first passenger flight is expected early next year.

John Stewart, Chair of HACAN ClearSkies, said, “On Tuesday we will get the hype. Once more the aviation industry will pull out all its public relations stops. But behind the glamour and glitz of the launch ceremony is the reality for residents. This plane will be one of the noisiest beasts in the sky. It is quite ridiculous for Airbus to try and imply it will be a quiet plane just because it is quieter than a 747. The fact is that the A380 just meets the international noise standards for new planes. That means that, over the coming years, it will be one of the noisiest planes in the sky”.

Stewart added “This new plane might have some advantages if airports and governments were going to use its huge passenger-carrying capacity to cut the overall number of flights using major airports. But that is not the intention. Our call is for BAA to use the A380 to cut overall flight numbers at Heathrow to their mid-1990 levels.”

Notes for Editors:

  1. The launch will take place in Toulouse on Tuesday 18th January in the presence of Tony Blair and President Jacques Chirac.

  2. From 2006 new planes must meet what are known as Chapter 4 noise standards. These are internationally agreed standards. These replace the 1977 Chapter 3 standards. The A380 only just meets the new Chapter 4 standards.

For further information contact John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650

Double trouble for Government on aviation

High Court, Monday 13th December: Judicial Review of Aviation White Paper
High Court, Tuesday 14th December: Judicial Review Night Flight Consultation

The Government is being challenged on two major planks of its aviation policy. On Monday 13th December it faces a Judicial Review of its Aviation White Paper in the High Court in London. On the next day, at the same venue, a Judicial Review of its recent consultation on night flights will take place (1).

The challenge on the White Paper will make history. It is the first time ever that the courts have allowed a Judicial Review of any government white paper. The Government is being challenged on its White Paper by airport campaign groups representing communities around Stansted, Luton and Heathrow and by the London boroughs of Wandsworth and Hillingdon. A separate challenge to the White Paper by Herts and North Essex will also be heard by the court. A third challenge, brought by two businessmen near Gatwick Airport, will be heard by the court after Christmas. A final judgement is expected by mid-February.

The night flight challenge is being brought by the London boroughs of Wandsworth and Richmond. A decision on this case is expected first.

A Judicial Review can only challenge specific shortcomings in the decision-making process. It cannot challenge the contents of the White Paper.

The High Court challenge on the Aviation White Paper will highlight four key flaws:

  • the consultation document leading up to the White Paper did not make clear that the ending of runway alternation at Heathrow could be a short-term alternative to a third runway (2);

  • the consultation document failed to give people the opportunity of commenting on the proposal, favoured in the White Paper, of going for an extended runway at Luton (3);

  • the White Paper ignores the absence of a commercial justification for a second Stansted runway, contrary to the Government’s own ground-rules for the consultation (4).

  • the Government failed to provide the public with information about alternative proposals for new airports at Thames Reach and on the Isle of Sheppey and failed to give proper consideration to those options (5);

The key grounds for the challenge on night flights are:

  • the recent consultation document (6) on night flights made no mention of the fact that the Government may abolish the limit on the number of flights using Heathrow, Stansted and Gatwick at night despite the fact that it was clear in the Aviation White Paper that the Government would seek legislation to give it the powers to do so;

  • the consultation document did not deal with the fact that some of the planes using the airports at night are actually noisier than the DfT’s computer-generated measurements show.

John Stewart, Chair of HACAN ClearSkies, said, “These challenges spell double trouble for the Government. Almost exactly a year ago (7) the Government published its 30 year Aviation White Paper with much fanfare. It hoped that would be the end of the debate and it could proceed with its plans for a massive expansion of aviation. Yet, a year later the protesters are still here…..and stronger than ever. Our message is clear: we stand united against both the Government’s proposals for airport expansion and night flights.”

Notes for Editors:

  1. Both cases will take place at the High Court in the Strand. Both cases are expected to start at 10.30am (but the courts do not give final confirmation until the day before). There will be an opportunity on both days to interview members of the protest groups and the local authorities outside the High Court before the cases start.

  2. Runway alternation means that people living in West London within about 8 miles of Heathrow only get planes landing over the head for half the day. Planes switch runways at 3pm. The applicants are arguing that there was no indication in the consultation that runway alternation was in any way an alternative to a 3rd runway. Yet the White Paper, which put the proposal for a 3rd runway on the back-burner, contained the proposal that runway alternation could be ended at Heathrow.

  3. The consultation document contained two options for expansion of Luton Airport: the construction of a replacement southern runway; and a new runway on a different alignment. It did not include details of plans to extend the current runway, the proposal that emerged in the White Paper. Therefore, the applicants argue, people did not have the opportunity to comment on the proposal that emerged.

  4. The consultation documents made it clear that commercial viability was a “hurdle which must be passed for new and existing airport sites”. BAA advised the Government that a second Stansted runway would only be commercially viable if it could be cross-subsidised by Heathrow and Gatwick revenues but the regulator (the CAA) ruled against the option of cross-subsidisation by BAA during the consultation process. Despite this clear impasse, the Government has stated in the White Paper that a second Stansted runway should be built by 2011 or 2012.

  5. The applicants argue that the Government had information about the viability of new airports at Thames Reach and the Isle of Sheppey that it did not set out in its consultation document. Therefore, the applicants argue, people were not in a position to make a proper assessment of these options when responding to the consultation. The process was at fault. The fact that the applicants have included this point in their challenge does not mean they favour building an airport at Thames Reach or Sheppey.

  6. Every 5/6 years the Government agrees with the airlines on a night flight regime for Heathrow, Stansted and Gatwick. The current agreement runs out in October 2005. The Government is consulting on a new regime in two parts. Consultation on the first consultation paper ended in October. This is the consultation paper that is the subject of the Judicial Review. The Department for Transport plans to publish a second consultation paper (containing more detailed proposals) in January, but that will depend on the outcome of the Judicial Review.

  7. The Aviation White Paper was published on the 16th December 2003.

For further information contact:

John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650 (note on Wednesday 8th he is in Scotland and only contactable on the mobile).

Richard Buxton — solicitor in both legal challenges — 01223 328933

Steve Mayner, Wandsworth Council — 0208 871 7560 or 07860 481368

Over 1,000 people threaten to resist airport expansion

Over a thousand people have signed a nationwide pledge to resist airport expansion…

Over a thousand people have signed a nationwide pledge to resist airport expansion just over a month after it was launched outside Parliament on 8th October (1). The signatories include Dr Caroline Lucas, the Principal Speaker of the Green Party and MEP for South East England, the author and columnist George Monbiot and the veteran environmentalist, Teddy Goldsmith. People are currently signing the pledge at the rate of over 20 a day. The organisers of the pledge, to be found at www.airportpledge.org.uk, expect many more people will sign the pledge over the coming months.

The pledge is being distributed to groups and individuals across the country. People are being invited to sign up, pledging themselves to take personal action to resist airport expansion. Personal action could include anything from setting up local campaigns to taking part in non-violent direct action (2).

The pledge is in response to the Government’s Aviation White Paper launched last December. The White Paper forecast a near-trebling of passengers using UK airports over the next 30 years. It predicted there could be runways built at Stansted, Heathrow or Gatwick, Birmingham, Edinburgh and Glasgow, as well as significant expansion at most of the UK’s other airports. This is thought to be the first time that a coalition of organisations has used the threat of personal resistance to pre-empt government policy at its development stage.

George Marshall of Rising Tide, who will be administering the pledge, said, “The response to the pledge over this first month shows just how much anger there is at the Government’s aggressive plans to expand airports. If the Government does not listen, I think direct action in inevitable.”

John Stewart, Chair of HACAN ClearSkies and one of the organisers of the pledge, said “People from all walks of life are signing the pledge. It is not surprising since people feel the Government is only listening to the well-funded voices of the aviation industry.”

Green MEP Caroline Lucas said, “I have joined the hundreds of activists who have already signed the Airports Pledge to signal my commitment to taking whatever non-violent lawful measures I can to prevent new runways from being built across the South-East.”

Tony Juniper, Director of Friends of the Earth, said, “The Government’s go-for-growth plans for aviation must be stopped. They completely contradict Tony Blair’s pledge to fight climate change and will cause immense damage to our countryside, our communities and our natural habitats.”

Stephen Tindale, Director of Greenpeace, said, “Tony Blair has made climate change a key priority. Aviation is the fastest-growing contributor to climate change. If the Prime Minister is serious about tackling climate change, he has no option but to abandon any thoughts of new runways or new airports.”

Ian Leggett from People and Planet said, “Tony Blair describes climate change as the world’s greatest environmental challenge. But leading a Government that is committed to airport expansion is not consistent with global leadership on reducing greenhouse gas emissions.”

Stephen Joseph, Director Transport 2000, said, “Airport expansion has no place in a sustainable transport system. The Government should be concentrating on providing the UK with a first-class rail and bus system and particularly promoting substitution of short haul flights with high-speed rail. It is just not sustainable to go on giving the aviation industry the huge tax breaks it currently enjoys.”

Notes for Editors:

  1. The launch took place on Friday 8th October on College Green, opposite the Houses of Parliament. The pledge is being backed by Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, the Green Party, People and the Planet, Rising Tide and Transport 2000, together with local protest groups HACAN ClearSkies and Swansea Airport No Expansion.

  2. The Pledge is not a petition. It is an invitation for people to pledge themselves to take action. The exact wording is:

“In the event that the Government chooses to ignore the widespread and well-informed opposition, and refuses to back away from its expansionist policy, I will take personal action to block airport expansion and to prevent companies from supporting and funding it.”

People are being encouraged to sign up online at a specially-created website: www.airportpledge.org.uk

For further details contact:

John Stewart, Joint Co-ordinator of the Pledge and Chair of HACAN ClearSkies, 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650

George Marshall from Rising Tide, Joint Co-ordinator of the Pledge, on 01865 241097.

Generous but Cynical

Beware BAA Bearing Gifts, Cautions Pressure Group

Residents group HACAN ClearSkies has called the plans BAA published yesterday to deal with blight and noise around Heathrow ‘generous but cynical’.

Yesterday BAA announced a three month consultation on its proposals to assist residents whose properties may be blighted because of the continuing threat from a third runway. It also announced plans to deal with noise levels in areas close to Heathrow (1).

BAA has said that, if it finally decides to go-ahead with a third runway (2), it will offer compensation to residents whose homes would need to be demolished. It will offer to buy people’s homes at their 2002 prices (before the possibility of a third runway was proposed), plus inflation, plus 10% removal expenses. Removal expenses would also be available to people, within two or three miles from Heathrow, who would be living under the 3rd runway flight paths (3).

BAA has issued a separate consultation on noise mitigation measures. It is offering people who currently live about 2 miles from the airport help with reallocating if they decide to move (4). And it is planning to install improved sound insulation in schools and hospitals under the existing flight paths for areas within about 5 miles from the airport (5).

HACAN ClearSkies Chair John Stewart said, “This is a generous but cynical package. The levels of compensation are higher than before, but BAA’s motives in making the offer must be questioned. They are simply trying to buy off protest. This is Santa with a sneer. There is nothing whatsoever in this for the tens of thousands of people across London and the Thames Valley who live further away from the airport and who will experience increased noise levels if a 3rd runway is built.”

Notes for Editors

  1. The Aviation White Paper, published by the Government on 16th December, required BAA to draw up these consultation proposals.

  2. In the Aviation White Paper a 3rd runway at Heathrow was put on hold until at least 2015. The Government was concerned that, if a 3rd runway was built earlier, pollution levels around Heathrow would exceed the EU legal limits.

  3. People who will live within the 66dBA Leq contour — that is the area where the daytime noise averages out at 66 decibels over the course of a year.

  4. People living within the 69dBA Leq contour

  5. Schools and hospitals within the 63dBA Leq contour.

Maps of the areas affected are available on BAA’s website.

For further information contact John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or his new temporary mobile number 07985 944802.

New guide challenges the need for night flights at Heathrow

New research “destroys the myth that planes would need to leave America or Asia at unsociable hours if night flights were banned at Heathrow”

Joint Press Release from London Green Party and HACANClearSkies

Press Launch:
10am, 20th September at City Hall

Brand new research challenges the myth that night flights are required for operational or economic reasons. It destroys the the argument that planes would need to leave America or Asia at unsociable hours if night flights were to be banned at Heathrow. The findings form part of a new guide (1), published by pressure group HACAN ClearSkies, which will be launched by Darren Johnson, Chair of the GLA Environment Committee, at City Hall on Monday 20th September (2).

The launch of the guide comes at a time when the Department for Transport is consulting on a new night flight regime for Heathrow (3). It is also published to coincide with a major meeting in Paris in a few weeks time when organisations from across Europe will come together to plan a campaign to ban night flights at all European airports (4).

The question of night flights at Heathrow soared up the political agenda when Heathrow residents defeated the UK Government in the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg in October 2001, successfully arguing that the right to a good night’s sleep was a human right. That ruling was partially overturned when the Strasbourg Appeal Court ruled in the Government’s favour in July last year, allowing night flights to continue at Heathrow (5).

Green GLA member Darren Johnson said, “I am delighted to launch the guide. The call for a ban on night flights at Heathrow has wide support across the political spectrum. What is so useful about this handy guide is that it answers simply and clearly many of the basic questions people ask about night flights.”

John Stewart, Chair HACAN ClearSkies, “Our guide exposes the airlines to be myth-makers. It destroys the argument that planes would need to leave America or Asia at unsociable hours if night flights were banned at Heathrow. It shows the real issue is not time zones, but that it would cost the airlines more if flights were confined to the day. It will provide useful ammunition to the growing Europe-wide campaign to ban night flights.”

Notes for Editors

  1. The guide asked key questions. Is a night ban practicable? It also asked questions about the economic value of night flights – below is an extract from the guide:

    “Won’t a ban merely move the problem to other countries, as it is not possible to depart and arrive during the day because of time zones?”

    Time zones are unlikely to present insuperable problems. It is on long-haul flights to Europe where it is alleged there could be problems. We consider several examples of routes to/from the UK:

    From the East Coast USA — flight time 7 hours, time difference 5 hours — so a departure after 7pm but before 10pm would arrive in the UK between 7am and 10am. Allowing a four hour turnaround, a plane leaving the UK at 2pm would arrive on the east coast at 4pm — no problems with this example.

    From the West Coast USA — it is 9/10 hours flight time and eight hours difference making a total time of 18 hours. So a US west coast departure at 6pm would arrive at 12 noon UK time. If it then took off from the UK at 2pm, it would arrive back on the US west coast at 4pm — so again, no night flights at either end, and no scheduling problems.

    From Africa — there is only a marginal time difference of +/- 2 hours. So taking Jo’berg as an example, leaving London at 7pm would arrive Jo’berg at 8am — return at 10am, would arrive at 11pm in London.

    From the Far East — a 9pm flight to Singapore would arrive at 6pm — you could not do a 24 hour return trip so they would need two aircraft. In which case a Singapore departure at 8am would arrive London at 2pm.

    In conclusion, you may not be able to get the businessman to a 9am meeting every time but it certainly looks possible to rota most flights outside the night period in both directions. The main issues for airlines appear not to be different time zones but the threat of competition (who gets in earliest) and cost (maybe some flights you can only make two rotations a day instead of three, forcing the cost up: the airlines would get less trips out of each aircraft and may also, if the rotation became particularly difficult, be required to buy additional aircraft).

    The real issue is not time zones, but that it would cost the airlines more if flights were confined to the day

  2. The launch will take place on Monday 20th September in Room CRI (Lower Ground Floor) at City Hall, Queens Walk, London SE1 at 10am. GLA members, London and Thames Valley MPs and key local authority members have been invited. Some residents who live under the flight path have also been invited. Refreshments will be served.

    Copies of the guide will be available at the launch and thereafter by email.

  3. The Department for Transport is currently consulting on the night flight regime at Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted. The current agreement with the airlines runs out in Autumn 2005. The Department is consulting on proposals for 2005-2011. It is a two-part consultation. Deadline for responses to part one is the end of October. That has taken the form of a consultation on general principles. The detaled proposals will be contained in part two, expected towards the end of the year.

  4. On the 2nd October, community groups from Europe’s major airports will meet in Paris to start planning a Europe-wide campaign to ban night flights. In January 2005, the groups expect to launch ‘The Million Signature Petition’ calling for a ban on night flights at Europe’s airports. Under the terms of the new EU Constitution, if citizen groups from EC countries collect a petition with a million signatures on any topic, it requires to be taken note of by both the European Parliament and the European Commission.

  5. The Judgement of the Appeal Court upheld the finding of the lower court that, in certain circumstances, night flights could infringe people’s right to a good night’s sleep under Article 8 of the Human Rights Convention, but ruled that, in this case, the UK Government had balanced that against the needs of the economy, of air passengers and the profits BA claim to make from night flights.

For further information contact:

Green Party Press Office on 0207 983 4424 or 07795616812
John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650

Night Flight Consultation Offers No Hope for Residents

Ban on night flights at Heathrow already ruled out

The consultation on night flights, issued by the Department for Transport yesterday (1), offers no hope for residents under the flight, according to pressure group HACAN ClearSkies. The Department for Transport has ruled out a ban on night flights at Heathrow.

The consultation paper is about the night flight regime intended to take effect at Heathrow, Stansted and Gatwick for the six years starting in autumn 2005. It will replace the current agreement with the airlines.

This is stage one of the consultation. Stage two is expected to be published later this year.

The Department for Transport makes clear that most of its detailed proposals will not emerge until the second round of consultation. In this consultation paper the Department is suggesting that the noisiest planes might be banned during the night (2). But it also makes quite clear that it sees no prospect of night flights being banned. At present there are 16 flights on an average “night” between 11.30pm and 6am, the majority of which land at Heathrow between 4.30 and 6am.

The Department rules out any prospect of meeting the World Health Organisation’s recommended limits on aircraft noise at night for at least 30 years (3).

John Stewart, Chair HACAN ClearSkies, said, “This consultation offers no hope for residents under the flight path. The fact that the Department might decide to ban some planes that are marginally more noisy is no guarantee that that there will be fewer night flights. We will continue to fight every inch of the way for a night flight ban. Shortly will be publishing a report showing that night flights are unnecessary. We have also linked up with groups across Europe to mount an international campaign against night flights.”

Notes for Editors

  1. Night Flying Restrictions at Heathrow, Gatwick and Stansted was launched by the Department for Transport on 21st July 2004

  2. Already the noisiest planes are not permitted at night. The Department is asking for views on excluding the next-noisiest category.

  3. The maximum sound level recommended by the World Health Organisation guidelines is 45 decibels. That would rule out all night flights at Heathrow. The UK Government has signed up to these guidelines. In this consultation paper the Department for Transport calls them “long term targets”, adding “in respect of aircraft noise at night, the 30 year time horizon of the White Paper provides a suitable time parameter for ‘longer term’.”

For more information contact John Stewart on 0207 737 641 or 07957 385650.

BAA Back Away From 480,000 Limit at Heathrow

A senior BAA manager has admitted for the first time that the company would be prepared to break the cap on the number of flights

A senior BAA manager has admitted for the first time that the company would be prepared to break the cap on the number of flights permitted to use the airport each year which was set by the Government when it gave Terminal Five the go-ahead in 2001. Stephen Byers, Secretary of State for Transport at the time, imposed an annual limit of 480,000 flights using the airport (1). Until now BAA has made it clear it would adhere to that limit. But one of its senior managers, Tabitha Stebbings, told a recent meeting of the Heathrow Area Consultative Committee that, if it felt that the noise, air pollution and traffic levels would not be excessive, BAA would seek permission to go beyond the 480,000 limit (2).

Ms Stebbings, who heads up BAA’s work on Project Heathrow (3), which is looking at the impact ‘mixed-mode’ and a 3rd runway would have on Heathrow, said that BAA was “not neutral” in these matters. She admitted that if “a number of pre-conditions were met” BAA would be prepared to seek permission to exceed the 480,000 limit (4).

John Stewart, Chair of pressure group HACAN ClearSkies, “At last the truth is out. BAA has been stringing us all along for nearly three years with assurances that they intended to work within the 480,000 limit.”

Notes for Editors

  1. When he recommended the go-ahead for Terminal, Roy Vandermeer, the Inspector at the T5 Pubic Inquiry, suggested that, for the sake of the residents under the flight paths, annual flight numbers should be capped at 480,000 when Terminal Five opened (2007). This was accepted by the Government in November 2001. In July 2002, when announcing the consultation for a possible 3rd runway at Heathrow, the current Transport Secretary Alistair Darling said that the 480,000 limit only applied to the existing two runways.

    • At present there are around 465,000 flights at year

    • If mixed-mode was introduced between 7am and 5pm, on Government figures, this would rise to at least 515,000 a year

    • A recent report, compiled by the CAA for the Department for Transport, estimated that a 3rd runway (without mixed-mode on the existing runways) would mean 700,000 flights per year; with mixed-mode, around 735,000 flights.

  2. As part of the conditions attached to the Terminal Five decision, the Government said that BAA, if it wanted to exceed the 480,000 limit, would need to make the case at a Planning Inquiry.

  3. Project Heathrow has been set up by the Department of Transport to look again at the impact on air pollution, noise and traffic of a third runway and the introduction of mixed-mode operations. (it is working closely with BAA on the project). Currently planes landing over London use one runway until 3pm before switching to the other. This gives residents closer to Heathrow a half day’s relief from the noise. It is known as runway alternation. Mixed-mode operations would mean the abolition of runway alternation.

  4. Tabitha Stebbings was addressing the meeting of the Heathrow Area Consultative Committee held on 21st July.

For further information contact John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650.

Judicial Review of Aviation White Paper Given Go-Ahead

High Court is expected to hear the case within the next three or four months

The courts have given the go-ahead for organisations challenging the Aviation White Paper to mount a full Judicial Review in the High Court (1). The Government is being challenged by airport campaign groups representing communities around Stansted, Luton and Heathrow and by the London boroughs of Wandsworth and Hillingdon.

The High Court is expected to hear the case within the next three or four months. If the court finds in favour of the campaigners, the Government could be forced to re-run the consultation leading up to the White Paper and probably re-write the White Paper.

A Judicial Review can only challenge specific shortcomings in the decision-making process. It cannot challenge the contents of the White Paper.

The High Court challenge will highlight four key flaws:

  • the consultation document did not make clear that the ending of runway alternation at Heathrow could be a short-term alternative to a third runway (2);

  • the consultation document failed to give people the opportunity of commenting on the proposal, favoured in the White Paper, of going for an extended runway at Luton (3);

  • the White Paper ignores the absence of a commercial justification for a second Stansted runway, contrary to the Government’s own ground-rules for the consultation (4).

  • the Government failed to provide the public with information about alternative proposals for new airports at Thames Reach and on the Isle of Sheppey and failed to give proper consideration to those options (5);

John Stewart, Chair of HACAN ClearSkies, said, “People in West London are furious that they were not given the chance to comment on plans to end runway alternation at Heathrow. These plans emerged from nowhere in the White Paper. Yet runway alternation is a life-saver for many in West London.”

Stewart added, “This decision by the judges to give us the go-ahead to take our challenge to the High Court is a major blow to the Government. It did not get the green light it wanted for its aggressive plans for airport expansion.”

Notes for Editors

  1. The court made its announcement on Friday 11th June.

  2. Runway alternation means that people living in West London within about 8 miles of Heathrow only get planes landing over the head for half the day. Planes switch runways at 3pm. The applicants are arguing that there was no indication in the consultation that runway alternation was in any way an alternative to a 3rd runway. Yet the White Paper, which put the proposal for a 3rd runway on the back-burner, contained the proposal that runway alternation could be ended at Heathrow.

  3. The consultation document contained two options for expansion of Luton Airport: the construction of a replacement southern runway; and a new runway on a different alignment. It did not include details of plans to extend the current runway, the proposal that emerged in the White Paper. Therefore, the applicants argue, people did not have the opportunity to comment on the proposal that emerged.

  4. The consultation documents made it clear that commercial viability was a “hurdle which must be passed for new and existing airport sites”. BAA advised the Government that a second Stansted runway would only be commercially viable if it could be cross-subsidised by Heathrow and Gatwick revenues but the regulator (the CAA) ruled against the option of cross-subsidisation by BAA during the consultation process. Despite this clear impasse, the Government has stated in the White Paper that a second Stansted runway should be built by 2011 or 2012.

  5. The applicants argue that the Government had information about the viability of new airports at Thames Reach and the Isle of Sheppey that it did not set out in its consultation document. Therefore, the applicants argue, people were not in a position to make a proper assessment of these options when responding to the consultation. The process was at fault. The fact that the applicants have included this point in their challenge does not mean they favour building an airport at Thames Reach or Sheppey.

For further information contact:

John Stewart, Chair HACAN ClearSkies — Tel: 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650

Richard Buxton, the solicitor taking this case forward — Tel: 01223 328933

Heathrow comes to North London

Official: 50% of all flights are routed over Finsbury Park, Stoke Newington and Highbury

BAA has confirmed that half of all flights landing at Heathrow Airport are routed over densely-populated areas of North London. The company, which owns the airport, told pressure group HACAN ClearSkies (1), that many North London residents can expect hundreds of planes flying over their homes most days of the year. Planes land over London when the prevailing west wind is blowing (2).

John Stewart, Chair HACAN ClearSkies, said, “Aircraft noise is no longer a concern just for South West London. Over the last few years it has become a capital-wide problem. BAA has now confirmed to us that the residents of Finsbury Park, Stoke Newington and Highbury can expect half of all planes landing at the airport. This has been done without any warning or consultation.”

Stewart added, “Both BAA and the Department for Transport are reluctant to explain the reason for the big increase in recent years. In the absence of hard information we can only assume it has been done for operational reasons. But the result has been constant noise for many people in North London.”

Local resident Caroline Diehl said, “It’s summer, the birds are singing and the windows are wide-open — but in Hackney we can’t hear the birds sing and we are tempted to sleep with the windows shut. From 6.00am — and often earlier, aeroplanes roar overhead as they make their way down from Finsbury Park, over Stoke Newington and Dalston, to the Thames and Heathrow. The planes are equally noisy late at night. Our children are regularly woken, and we can’t sit outside and hear ourselves talk. It’s time to reclaim the skies as well as the streets! Make your voice heard now, before it’s silenced forever by the roar and whine of the jet engine.”

Notes for Editors

  1. HACAN ClearSkies is the well-established group which represents residents under the Heathrow flight paths.

  2. In a typical year, the west wind blows over London 70-75% of the time.

For further information contact:

John Stewart, 0207 737 6641 or 07957 385650

Caroline Diehl, 07980 212 814

MEPs fail to back night flight ban

Proposal receives the backing of just ten British MEPs

MEPs have failed to back a bid in the European Parliament to ban night flights. Only 54 MEPs from across Europe supported the proposal to halt night flights at European airports. It received the backing of just ten British MEPs (1).

The proposal was launched by Green MEP Caroline Lucas in London earlier this year. Together with four European colleagues, she sponsored a Written Declaration calling for a Europe-wide ban in night flights. If a majority of MEPs sign a Written Declaration, the proposal becomes the opinion of the Parliament.

The only London MEPs to sign the Written Declaration were:

  • Robert Evans (Labour)
  • Sarah Ludford (London’s only Liberal Democrat)
  • Jean Lambert (London’s sole Green MEP).

The London MEPs who did not back a ban on night flights were:

  • Claude Moraes, and Mary Honeyball (Labour);
  • Ian Twinn, Charles Tannock, Theresea Villiers, Richard Balfe and John Bowis (Conservative).

The only South East MEPs to sign were:

  • Caroline Lucas (the region’s only Green MEP)
  • Chris Hulne (Liberal Democrat)

The South East MEPs who did not back a ban were:

  • Deva Nirj; James Ellis; Daniel Hannan; Roy Perry; and James Provan (all Conservative)
  • Peter Skinner and Mark Watts (Labour)
  • Emma Nicolson (Lib Dem)
  • Nigel Farage (UKIP)

The majority of the Conservatives took the view that night flights were the responsibility of national governments, not the European Parliament. But John Bowis stressed that while, as the former MP for Battersea he appreciated the distress night flights caused, he believed that it would be operationally difficult to go for a complete ban. Richard Balfe refused even to consider the issue because he felt the Declaration was an election stunt by the Green Party.

Caroline Lucas said, “MEPs have come up with a number of different excuses for not signing. But to say, as a number of Conservatives have, that night flights are not an EU issue is simply not correct. The treaty which established the European Community states that the Council of Ministers may lay down rules that apply to international transport to or from a member state. The EU has also published a Noise Directive.”

John Stewart, Chair HACAN ClearSkies, said, “MEPs from all over Europe have received hundreds of letters urging them to support a ban on night flights. They have been forced to think about the problem. Night flights are now being talked about in the corridors of power across Europe. We intend to build on that.”

Notes for Editors

  1. The full list of British MEPs who signed the Written Declaration: Caroline Lucas, Green (South East); Jean Lambert, Green (London); Robert Evans, Labour (London); Sarah Ludford, Lib Dem (London); Chris Huhne, Lib Dem (South East); Andrew Duff, Lib Dem (Eastern); Eurig Wyn., Plaid (Wales); Jill Evans, Plaid (Wales); Neil MacCormick, SNP (Scotland); and Ian Hudgton, SNP (Scotland).

For further information contact John Stewart on 0207 737 6641.