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Heathrow tables 'shovel ready' plans for new third runway after rival bid submitted

The airport said it had submitted "shovel-ready" plans for a privately financed runway ahead of the Department for Transport's deadline on Thursday, which it said would clear the way for flights to take off within a decade

A British Airways plane taking off from Heathrow(Image: PA Archive/PA Images)

Heathrow's senior management have submitted their proposal to oversee the hub's long-awaited third runway expansion in a competitive tender process that will see it face off against a rival operator for the first time in the airport's history.

Airport officials confirmed they had lodged "shovel-ready" plans for a privately funded runway ahead of the Department for Transport's Thursday deadline, which they said would enable flights to commence within a decade, as reported by .

Heathrow announced its submission just one day after another operator – headed by hotel magnate Surinder Arora – disclosed it was putting forward a competing proposal to manage the megaproject.

The confrontation represents the first occasion that infrastructure improvements at the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's premier aviation hub have been opened to external bidders, in a move ministers hope will foster greater competition and prompt more efficient proposals.

The two sets of blueprints already differ on how to address the complex matter of the M25 running where the third runway would naturally terminate.

Heathrow's proposals include a £1bn scheme to divert the M25, which would create a tunnel beneath the southern section of the disputed strip.

Heathrow stated the costly measure ensures the runway will reach the standard 3,500m length and will allow the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ to maximise traffic volumes, and economic returns, following construction. Under the proposal led by billionaire Arora's hotel group, Arora Group, and devised by aviation project firm Bechtel, the runway would only extend to 2,800m.

Arora asserts that a shorter runway would help control construction costs and ensure timely delivery while still accommodating all types of aircraft.