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Big Interview: East Midlands Airport boss Steve Griffiths relishing opportunities for growth – but says freeport will play just a tiny part

On the freeport he said airport 'could have a very minimal role to play in it from an import and export point of view'

East Midlands Airport managing director Steve Griffiths

The boss of East Midlands Airport says he is relishing the chance to grow the business now that Covid-19 is behind us – but said the new freeport which it is part of would probably only be a tiny part of that.

Steve Griffiths became managing director of the Castle Donington airport last October, having steered Stansted through the pandemic. He told BusinessLive it was refreshing to be back on a level playing field – albeit in an economy hit by the consequences of war in Ukraine.

East Midlands Airport (EMA) performed relatively well during the lockdowns of 2020 and 2021 thanks to its central º£½ÇÊÓÆµ location making it attractive to big freight companies including DHL, UPS, FedEx and Royal Mail.

It has the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s biggest share of the freight-only aircraft market – dedicated cargo flights rather than freight travelling in the bellies of passenger flights – handling more than 448,000 tonnes of goods a year. In fact, about a third of the airport income is from freight.

The airport is part of the new East Midlands Freeport which takes in the new warehousing and business parks to the east and north, as well as the Ratcliffe on Soar Power Station site – which is ripe for development – and the East Midlands Intermodal Park in South Derbyshire.

It is the only inland freeport, though the airport’s role as an import/export hub in the strategy will not be as significant as the seaports which have gained freeport status around the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ.

Instead it could see a small section of the airport site redeveloped, while fields it owns to the south of the A453, near the village of Diseworth, could also – controversially – one day be considered for development.

People living nearby are not happy about that, and the airport has said any future development will be subject to the usual planning process and public consultation.