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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Bristol Airport to appeal against North Somerset Council's expansion refusal

The decision on the application will now move to a national level

Bristol Airport(Image: James Beck/freelance)

Bristol Airport is planning to appeal against North Somerset Council’s decision to refuse its application for expansion.

The airport's proposals to increase capacity from 10 million passengers to 12 million a year, while adding thousands more parking spaces, were thrown out in February with council chiefs saying the environmental and societal costs outweighed the economic benefits.

The controversial decision to refuse the application went against advice from the council’s own planning officers, which meant the decision had to be ratified at a second meeting in March.

The decision on the application will now move to a national level and will be made by an independent planning inspector or, if the appeal is recovered, by the Government.

Bristol Airport claims its plans to expand would offer passengers more routes and flights from the South West, create jobs, facilitate inward investment and inbound tourism, and support greener and more sustainable, regional economic growth.

It said an expansion would "benefit" the South West’s economy and support the Government’s aim of ‘levelling-up’ economic growth across the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, as well as offering an opportunity to explore new flight routes in the Middle East and North America.

However, those campaigning against the proposals have claimed the expansion could be harmful to the environment, creating noise and air pollution and damaging the habitats of some wildlife.

CGI of Bristol Airport expansion(Image: Western Daily Press)

Dave Lees, chief executive of Bristol Airport said: “Expansion at Bristol Airport will spur growth in the South West and increase the rate at which jobsare created, replacing those lost at the airport during the current crisis.