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Economic Development

North to South Wales air route scrapped by the Welsh Government

It said it will use the public subsidy for the route to make improvements in public transport across North Wales

Eastern Airways had operated the route.

The Welsh Government has scrapped its North to South Wales funded air service, saying it will instead use the annual £2.9m public subsidy to improve integrated public transport.

The public service obligation route, between RAF Valley on Anglesey and Cardiff Airport, had been suspended since March, 2020, due to pandemic. The Welsh Government has now confirmed it will not recommence the route. It had been operated by Eastern Airways. Prior to the pandemic the route carried nearly 14,000 passengers a year.

The Welsh Government said pre-Covid some 77% of people using route did so for working purposes, but that a shift to hybrid and homeworking has changed demand patterns.

Deputy Minister for Climate Change, with responsibility for transport, Lee Waters, said: “The pandemic has driven huge change to the way people work, with a reduction in business travel over the past few years.

“We don’t think passenger levels will return to a level that makes this service viable economically or environmentally. Instead we will invest the money saved from running the service into improving public transport in north Wales. This will benefit more people and help us reach our net zero target by 2050”.

The decision follows an independent study commissioned by the Welsh Government into the carbon impact of the service on the environment. It said this shows the service had a more negative impact on the environment than any other form of travel between Anglesey and Cardiff, unless it was flying close to full capacity every day.

The analysis also showed that despite common perceptions, the air service was not always the fastest link to Cardiff from North Wales, especially east of Bangor, where it said rail travel is faster, door-to-door.

Mr Waters said: “We need to achieve greater reductions in our emissions in the next decade than we’ve achieved over the course of the last three decades if we are to avert catastrophic climate change. It’s going to an uphill challenge and difficult choices will need to be confronted."