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Gatwick CEO calls for expansion to meet surging travel demand and alleviate delays

Gatwick currently competes with Mumbai's Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport for a position as the world's busiest single runway airport

Gatwick Airport (Image: Getty Images)

Gatwick Airport's chief executive, Stewart Wingate, has stated that the airport is "practically full" and needs to expand to meet growing travel demand and reduce delays.

In an interview with City AM, Wingate said: "If you look at the need from Gatwick airport’s perspective, at the moment we’re practically full," and "Certainly in the peak times and in peak hours of the day, we know that there is demand for flying, often for long-haul routes... but at the moment we’re finding it incredibly difficult to accommodate."

This comes after the Planning Inspectorate passed its recommendation on whether to approve the airport’s £2.2bn proposals for a second runway to ministers last Wednesday, as reported by .

The final decision will be made by the Secretary of State in February. One of the main reasons behind the expansion bid is to introduce new long-haul routes, a market traditionally dominated by Heathrow in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Currently, Gatwick competes with Mumbai’s Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj International Airport as the world’s busiest single runway airport, with nearly 20m passengers passing through its gates in the first half of this year. This high demand has led to the Sussex hub signing up long-haul airlines in recent years, including Norse Atlantic, Air Mauritius and Ethiopian Airlines, offering over 50 destinations via long-haul flights.

Passengers at Gatwick airport could be hit by six days of strikes in July(Image: Getty)

Gatwick Airport's CEO, Stewart Wingate, has highlighted the potential benefits of a proposed expansion project, saying: "If the project were to go ahead... what it enables us to do is attract some of those really lucrative long-haul routes because the pent-up demand is there," referencing the surge in travel following Covid lockdowns. The expansion could also alleviate current pressures on the airport's infrastructure, potentially reducing waiting times and pre-take-off cancellations.

Gatwick has faced significant disruption, with staff shortages leading to delays in 2022 and issues with its air traffic control operation resulting in apologies to passengers last September. "It gives us the opportunity to dramatically increase the resilience of the operation of the airport... so that we can actually offer a more reliable service to passengers in the years ahead," Wingate told City AM.

However, the project's future remains uncertain as Gatwick faces opposition from the Joint Local Authorities (JLA), which includes councils such as Crawley, West Sussex, Surrey, and Reigate. They have expressed concerns in a recent letter, stating the project would "impose unjustified adverse impacts on local communities, local businesses and the receiving environment."