Residents’ fury at Heathrow compensation consultation

Press Release

 27/7/14 for immediate use

Residents’ fury at Heathrow compensation consultation

 Furious residents have complained to campaign group HACAN about Heathrow Airport’s most recent consultation (1).  Last week Heathrow released a three month consultation seeking people’s views on who should qualify for compensation if a third runway goes ahead.  But residents have told HACAN that they feel they are being steamrollered into accepting the fact that a third runway is inevitable at a time when the Government has made no decision on the future of Heathrow.

HACAN Chair John Stewart said, “We get a constant stream of emails from people throughout the year but rarely have we been deluged with so many angry emails as we have had this past week over this consultation.  People are simply not prepared to discuss compensation arising from a third runway they simply don’t want”.

Stewart added: “HACAN works with Heathrow Airport on issues like flight paths which can improve the quality of life for people affected by the existing Heathrow but we will not be responding to this consultation.  We believe this consultation is putting the cart before the horse (2).”

The Airports Commission, which the Government set up to look at new runways in London and the South East, will not report for another year.  It is looking at three possible options for expansion:  a third runway at Heathrow; a second runway at Gatwick; or a brand new EstuaryAirport.

ENDS

 (1).  http://your.heathrow.com/consultation/

(2). Blog by John Stewart on The cost of compensation to Heathrow: http://hacan.org.uk/blog/?p=305

 For further information:

John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957385650r

Heathrow’s noise claims do not stack up according to new reports

Press Release

29/6/14 for immediate use

Heathrow’s claims that a third runway will improve the overall noise climate for residents do not stack up, according to campaign group HACAN (1). It has compared Heathrow’s arguments with the findings of two recently-published reports and concludes that “Heathrow’s claims are unravelling in the face of the independent evidence.”

HACAN tested Heathrow’s evidence against the arguments put forward by the Civil Aviation Authority (2) in its new report on noise and the findings of a report from the consultancy firm Atkins carried out for the Mayor of London (3). The most damming indictment of Heathrow came from the Atkins report which showed the airport’s claim that a third runway will mean “at least 30% noise reduction” by 2030 is based on the assumption that the new runway will be only operating at one-third capacity. At full capacity, Akins shows, over one million people will be impacted, up from 725,000 today.

Both reports challenge Heathrow’s prediction that 90% of the planes using the airport in 2026, when any new runway is expected to open, will be the quieter ‘new generation’ aircraft. And they are dismissive that the proposed steeper landing approaches Heathrow wants to introduce will have any significant impact on noise levels.

Atkins verdict on Heathrow’s plans to increase respite for residents is damming. It argues that most communities will get less respite than they do today if a third runway is built. At present people in West London enjoy a half day’s break from the noise when planes switch runways at 3pm. This would be cut to a third if a new runway is built in order to give people under the new flight paths some respite.

HACAN chair John Stewart said, “We used the new reports to reality check Heathrow’s claims. The Airport came out badly. Most of its claims do not have a ring of truth about them. We could only award them 2 out of 5 on our reality score card.”

Stewart added: “Heathrow understands the need to deliver on noise. It is the biggest political barrier to a third runway. And its new proposals are an improvement on what went before but these two new independent reports illustrate the near-impossibility of sorting out noise at Heathrow.”

ENDS

Notes for Editors:

(1). HACAN Briefing attached

(2). The CAA published Managing Aviation Noise. Read here.

(3). The Mayor of London published the Inner Thames Estuary Feasibility Study. Its noise assessment was based on work commissioned by Atkins on behalf of Transport for London (TfL) from The Environmental Research and Consultancy Department (ERCD) of the CAA to calculate noise exposure contours for a series of scenarios that were developed by Atkins, and that relate to Heathrow Airport. Read TfL report.

For further information:

John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957385650

Heathrow Chief admits M4 would need to be diesel-free if 3rd Runway went ahead

Press Release

21/4/14 for immediate use

Heathrow Airport’s outgoing chief executive Colin Matthews has admitted that the M4 would need to be diesel-free if a 3rd runway was ever built at the airport.  Matthews told the aviation specialists Flightglobal (1), that “to fix air quality at Heathrow [you need to] replace the fleet of diesel engines coming down the M4 [motorway]”.   It is the first time that a senior Heathrow official has been so frank about the air pollution problems the airport is facing.

The European Union has made clear that its air pollution legal limits set in 2010 must be complied with by 2020 or member states face hefty fines.  In the UK, Central London and Heathrow are the two big areas of concern.  There are pockets around Heathrow which remain stubbornly above the legal limits.  The problem is caused by both the aircraft and the heavy traffic on the nearby roads and motorways.

John Stewart, chair of the campaign group HACAN, which opposes expansion of the airport, said, “We commend Colin Matthews on his honesty but it simply act of faith for the airport to believe that air pollution limits will be within the legal limits by 2026, the date a 3rd runway would be expected to open, as the new runway would mean an extra 240,000 flights a year.”

The Airports Commission, set up by the Government, is currently assessing the case for a 3rd runway at Heathrow and a second Gatwick runway.  It will report in summer 2015

 

ENDS

Notes for Editors:

(1).   HYPERLINK “http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/analysis-what-new-london-capacity-means-for-green-goals-397467/” http://www.flightglobal.com/news/articles/analysis-what-new-london-capacity-means-for-green-goals-397467/ (published 17/4/14)

For further information:

John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957386650

Increase? What increase in support of a 3rd runway?

Press Release

5/5/14 for immediate use

Figures unearthed by campaign group HACAN caste doubt on the claims by Heathrow Airport that support for a third runway is growing amongst local residents.  Last week Heathrow claimed that there was more support now for a third runway than when it was proposed by the last Labour Government.  It cited a recent opinion poll of more than 1,000 local residents carried by Populus which showed 48% are in favour of a third runway while 34% oppose it (1). 

However, HACAN dug out a similar Populus poll carried out in 2007 which revealed very similar results:  50% of people supported a 3rd runway and 30% were against (2).

HACAN Chair John Stewart said, “Heathrow Airport must be concerned that after more than a year of concerted, expensive and high-profile campaigning support for a third runway is little different than it was at the height of the protest six or seven years ago.  There has been no UKIP-style surge in support for a 3rd runway.”

Populus have carried out three polls on behalf of Heathrow Airport over the last year.  All are showing that about a third of residents consistently refuse to back expansion at Heathrow (3).

Referenda and surveys that were carried out last year by Hillingdon, Richmond and Hounslow showed even less support for expansion.  Around 72% of residents opposed a 3rd runway (4).

 

ENDS 

 

Notes for editors:

(1)   http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Heathrow-Borough-Poll-March-2014.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Heathrow-Borough-Poll-March-2014.pdf

(2) http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/download_pdf-170907-BAA-Heathrow-Future-Heathrow-Poll.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/download_pdf-170907-BAA-Heathrow-Future-Heathrow-Poll.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/download_pdf-170907-BAA-Heathrow-Future-Heathrow-Poll.pdf

(3) http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Heathrow-Borough-Poll-March-2014.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/Heathrow-Borough-Poll-March-2014.pdf and
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Heathrow_Poll_Nov131.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/Heathrow_Poll_Nov131.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/Heathrow%20Airport%20Local%20Resident%20Research.pdf
http://www.populus.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/Heathrow%20Airport%20Local%20Resident%20Research.pdf

(4)  http://www.richmond.gov.uk/100000_say_no_to_heathrow_expansion
http://www.richmond.gov.uk/100000_say_no_to_heathrow_expansion

For more information:  John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957385650

Heathrow Airport “cynically underestimating” number of homes that would be demolished to make way for 3rd runway

Press Release

15/5/14 for immediate use

Heathrow Airport has been accused of cynically underestimating the number of houses that would need to be demolished to make way for a third runway.  Campaign group HACAN, which opposes expansion of the airport, has said that the detailed maps which Heathrow released yesterday (1) show that hundreds of homes on the just outside the boundary of the new runway would be uninhabitable if it went ahead.  HACAN also questions whether the Grade 1 listed Harmondsworth Great Barn will, in reality, remain standing if expansion took place.

The maps show that hundreds of homes in Sipson would be within yards of the new runway (2) and that Hamondsworth Great Barn and the Grade 2 listed St Mary’s Church beside it would very close to the airport (3).

HACAN Chair John Stewart said: “We believe that Heathrow have cynically underestimated the number of homes that would need to go and are misleading people.  Sipson would be uninhabitable and the Great Barn would be so close to the runway that it could serve as a canteen for the cabin crew to get a final coffee before boarding their plane.”

Heathrow Airport, when unveiling it plans on Tuesday, claimed that, because it has slightly altered the alignment of the new runway, it had cut the number of homes that would be demolished from 950 to 750.  Their details plans suggest it could be many more.

ENDS 

 

Notes for Editors:

(1)   http://t.co/9pY6gW5SwF
http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/TBF-Volume-3-72dpi-jm.pdf
http://your.heathrow.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/05/TBF-Volume-3-72dpi-jm.pdf

(2) The homes in Sipson are those just outside the red line which is the airport boundary.
INCLUDEPICTURE “cid:image001.jpg@01CF701B.C2FD45C0” \* MERGEFORMATINET

(3)  The Barn is marked in green
INCLUDEPICTURE “cid:image002.jpg@01CF701B.C2FD45C0” \* MERGEFORMATINET

 

For further information:

John Stewart on 0207 737 6641

Jane Taylor, Chair Harmondsworth and Sipson Residents Association, 07990705470

New figures ‘blow out of the water’ Heathrow Airport’s claim that overall noise levels will fall if a third runway is built

Press Release

25/5/14 for immediate use

New figures published by the London Mayor ‘blow out of the water’ Heathrow Airport’s oft-repeated claim that overall noise levels will fall if a third runway is built.  They show that Heathrow’s claims assume the new runway will be only operating at one-third capacity.  They also argue that Heathrow is also over-optimistic about the introduction of quieter aircraft.  The Mayor’s figures, based on a study he commissioned from the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA), show that, if a third runway is built, over a million people will be impacted by noise, up from 725,000 today.

The new figures are part of a report on the Estuary Airport the Mayor submitted to the Airports Commission on Friday (1).  It shows that 31,500 people would be impacted by noise from an Estuary Airport operating over a million flights a year compared with the 725,000 people currently affected by a two-runway Heathrow, with around 470,000 flights each year.  It is estimated a two-runway Gatwick with around half the flights of an Estuary Airport, would impact around 15,000 people.

HACAN Chair John Stewart said, “These new figures from the Civil Aviation Authority blow out of the water Heathrow’s claims that a 3rd runway can cut noise levels.  They could be a game-changer as they show that Heathrow still has not found a way to deal with the politically toxic problem of noise.”

The CAA study shows that, if a third runway was built at Heathrow, people would be disturbed in new areas of London and the South East.

INCLUDEPICTURE “cid:image001.gif@01CF77F9.F0468830” \* MERGEFORMATINET

The Airports Commission, set up by the Government in 2012, to assess options for airport expansion is currently looking at the merits of building a third runway at Heathrow, a second runway at Gatwick, or an Estuary Airport on the Isle of Grain in Kent.  It is expected to consult on its proposals later this year before publishing its final report two months after the 2015 General Election.

 

ENDS

 

Notes for Editors:

(1)  http://www.tfl.gov.uk/cdn/static/cms/documents/mayoroflondon-inner-thames-estuary-fs-reponse.pdf
http://www.tfl.gov.uk/cdn/static/cms/documents/mayoroflondon-inner-thames-estuary-fs-reponse.pdf” http://www.tfl.gov.uk/cdn/static/cms/documents/mayoroflondon-inner-thames-estuary-fs-reponse.pdf

 

For further information:  John Stewart on 0207 737 6641 or 07957385650

Heathrow 3rd runway consultation branded a ‘PR exercise’

Heathrow Airport’s decision to embark on a six week consultation on its proposal for a third runway has been branded ‘nothing more than a PR exercise’ by local campaigners.

During the consultation, due to start on 3rd February, Heathrow will seek views from residents on how their plans for a new runway can be improved. They will mail out forms to 120,000 households and businesses most impacted by the proposals and invite other people to comment on line. Additionally drop-in events will be held in nine local areas (1).

The Airport stresses that the consultation is not about whether people want a third runway. Its chief executive Colin Matthews said: “This consultation is to make sure we correctly understand what local people value and that we can take their views into account as we refine our proposal”.

But John Stewart, chair of HACAN, the campaign group which opposes a third runway, said,”The big issue is whether or not a third runway should be built. This is nothing more than a PR exercise. It’s meaningless.”

The proposed new runway would destroy hundreds of homes in the village of Harmondsworth. The new flight path would be over Sipson, Harlington, Heston, Southall, Norwood Green, Bedford Park and Shepherds Bush. The runway is one of the options for expansion in London and the South East being examined by the Airports Commission. A final decision will not be taken until after the next General Election in summer 2015.

ENDS

Notes for Editors:

  1. The events will take place in
    • Harmondsworth
    • Longford
    • Harlington
    • Colnbrook
    • Richings Park
    • Hounslow
    • Brentford
    • Richmond
    • Windsor

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

Campaigners furious Davies favours two new runways at Heathrow

The campaign against the third runway at Heathrow has kicked off today. Campaigners have reacted with anger and disbelief to the news, leaked today (1), that the Airports Commission Interim Report, to be published on 17th December, favours two more runways at Heathrow. Continue reading “Campaigners furious Davies favours two new runways at Heathrow”