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Ports & Logistics

East Midlands Airport passenger numbers still struggling to recover, but strong growth expected from freight

'The passenger numbers have been more challenging and slower to recover than we would have hoped'

View from East Midlands Airport Air Traffic Control Tower across to Ratcliffe-on-Soar power station(Image: Beth Walsh)

Plans for a second runway at East Midlands Airport have not been not ruled out, even though there is more than enough existing capacity.

Politicians have been updated on the latest situation at the Castle Donington airport, on the Leicestershire/Derbyshire border – including plans for a freeport and further growth in freight shipments.

Neil Robinson, the corporate social responsibility and future airspace director for parent company Manchester Airports Group (MAG), provided a briefing to members of South Derbyshire District Council.

While passenger flights have been devastated by global lockdowns – down 90 per cent at the start of the year – the airport has seen a big rise in cargo-only planes. The airport is now a major hub for dedicated express freight operators such as

Expansion within the airport has been coupled with the growth of SEGRO’s vast East Midlands Gateway distribution park to the north and the new Maritime Rail Freight Interchange linking the park to the rail network. The rise in internet shopping has also added to freight movements.

When asked about potential future plans for a second runway, Mr Robinson said London Stansted – which is part of the same group – had managed to increase capacity from 43 million to 50 million passengers without an additional runway.

He said East Midlands, currently on 4.8 million passengers a year, had “ample capacity to grow for the foreseeable future”.

Mr Robinson said: “Never isn’t a word I would use but there is no need for one (a second runway) for the foreseeable future.