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Bristol Airport criticise £205m Welsh Government subsidy plans for rival Cardiff Airport

Chief executive of Bristol Airport Dave Lees said the planned subsidy would hand Cardiff an unfair competitive advantage

CEO of Bristol Airport Dave Lees.(Image: John Myers)


Bristol Airport has issued a stinging criticism of Welsh Government plans to invest a further £205m into Cardiff Airport claiming the scale of the proposed subsidy would be unprecedented in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ airport sector and provide its nearest rival with an unfair competitive advantage.

The Welsh Government, which acquired Cardiff Airport in 2013, said the planned investment over the next decade would be used to support the airport’s diversification strategy in areas such as aviation maintenance, repair and overhaul, general aviation and increasing freight movements. Some of the funding has also been earmarked to attract new airlines and routes, with the aim of increasing passenger numbers to exceed two million annually.

Following a non legally binding assessment of its investment plans from the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA), earlier this month the Welsh Government submitted revised funding plans for the Rhoose-based airport to the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ subsidy transparency database.

In an open letter to the Welsh Government’s Economy Secretary Rebecca Evans - whose portfolio includes responsibility for the airport - chief executive of Bristol Airport, Dave Lees, accuses the Welsh Government of a lack of transparency, with announcements being made prior to the Senedd going into recess.

In a written statement earlier this month Ms Evans, announced plans for a £20m investment, while the following day the Welsh Government lodged with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ subsidy transparency database plans to provide subsidy support of £205.2m to Cardiff Airport.

Mr Lees said: “It is deeply concerning that major announcements on the proposed subsidy have all taken place immediately prior to holidays and there was again no attempt to re-engage with Bristol Airport, despite repeated requests.

“Furthermore, repeated attempts by members of the Senedd and others to seek further detail on how Welsh Government intends to respond to the concerns raised in the CMA assessment has also been unsuccessful, resulting in a serious lack of transparency around this unprecedented subsidy in º£½ÇÊÓÆµ aviation, which is being funded at great expense by the taxpayer.”

Mr Lees added: “We are publicly calling for details to be urgently made available on the proposed subsidy including the benefits it will deliver, what alternatives have been considered, how the impacts have been assessed, in the context of the significant additional cost burden to the taxpayer in Wales.”