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PRIVACY
Economic Development

CBI backs Bristol Airport's expansion appeal

The plans were rejected by councillors in North Somerset last year

Bristol Airport(Image: James Beck/freelance)

One of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest business organisations has said it will support Bristol Airport’s expansion appeal.

The CBI said the proposals would help meet the region’s growing demand for air travel, create new international opportunities for South West businesses and be a “significant step” towards the government’s ‘levelling up’ agenda.

The controversial expansion plans were rejected by councillors in North Somerset last year, with the transport hub lodging an appeal in September.

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 after council chiefs said the environmental and societal costs outweighed the economic benefits.

The decision to reject the application went against advice from the council’s own planning officers, which meant it had to be ratified at a second meeting. The decision will now be taken at national level and made by an independent planning inspector or, if the appeal is recovered, by the Government.

“Bristol Airport is one of the key drivers of prosperity for North Somerset, Bristol, and the South West, supporting nearly 30,000 direct and indirect jobs and contributing around £1.7bn to the regional economy,” said Ben Rhodes, CBI South West deputy director.

“The increased connectivity which Bristol Airport’s expansion would deliver can be an important part of a South West economic recovery which places sustainability at its heart.”

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.