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PRIVACY
Opinion

Forget Heathrow expansion we need to create new hub airports in places like south Wales

A new international hub airport at Severnside would provide a huge boost to the Welsh economy

How a hub airport at Severnside could look.

Last week Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced plans to grow the economy including with fast-tracked privately funded mega projects. South Wales has high unemployment levels. An airport of the size envisaged would provide that economic growth generator which Reeves says is vital.

However, she is backing construction of a third runway and a sixth terminal at London Heathrow Airport to create a ‘national’ super world hub. One might think that will help residents in south Wales have more flight options and so benefit Wales’ economy. Both are unlikely.

The argument is that Heathrow will be come a world hub for the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. This makes little sense when considering the long land journey from north and south Wales. For those residents, the creation of increased services from big hub airports would provide shorter overall journey times. These would include Manchester for north Wales, Birmingham for mid-Wales and a Western Gateway Airport (WGA) in south-east Wales.


South-east England has an overheated economy with high wages, is over-polluted, over-congested, with little suitable land available and at premium prices.

Runway capacity is only part of the inadequate transport infrastructure argument against expanding Heathrow. The M4/M25 are running above capacity on the sections near Heathrow. The National Air Traffic Control chief executive made clear back in 2002 that the “air space over south-east England cannot support any new routes without serious implication. “

So where should this brand new major international airport be located?

This column avoids identifying an exact location for a new south-east Wales airport as there are several contenders not least Cardiff and Bristol international airports who would oppose any plan to close their sites. Other sites have been suggested: Severnside airport projecting into the estuary; Llanwern steelworks site positioned alongside the M4 and main line railway – but now a housing development.

The most recent study of such an airport was in 2013 by Western Gateway – a group of south Wales university transport and business academics (including myself) working with Welsh Government and local business organisations. The estimated cost at the time was £28bn to provide an airport with a wide range of business and leisure destinations: an international 21st century global airport.