Fresh call for Birmingham Airport expansion30 August 2012 Updated: 4 September 2012, 12:04A group of MPs, businesspeople and councillors have made fresh calls for the expansion of Birmingham Airport to ease pressure on Heathrow.
City council leader John Mutton is among those to put his name to a letter published in today's Daily Telegraph.
It said the long term of Birmingham Airport as a major gateway at the centre of the UK would reduce unproductive surface travel time and leave Heathrow as a gateway for London and the South East.
Current spare runway capacity at Birmingham means it could handle an extra 27 million passengers a year.
It is also considered the country's most accessible in Britain because of its location at the heart of the rail and motorway networks.
"A ‘hub airport’ in the South East favours a small, congested, and already economically strong part of the country. We need gateways close to the manufacturing, research and development of the Midlands and the North, linking these regions directly to emerging markets," the letter says.
"Overseas investors are discouraged from investing where there are no global links. For Britain, over-reliance on one large, full airport, risks national resilience and leads the rest of the world to believe there is just one gateway to this country.
"Airports in our great industrial cities have huge spare capacity.
"Birmingham Airport and NEC station will be the hub of the proposed HS2 network. With its proposed second runway, Birmingham’s spare capacity could rise to over 50 million and create 50,000 jobs.
"As local politicians and business leaders, we call on Government to encourage and assist airports to work with local enterprise partnerships and stakeholders.
"Infrastructure planning needs to provide confidence for airports to be able to plan well into the future. The Government must support expansion of Birmingham’s airport to maximise the regional growth.”
The letter has been signed by 20 Conservative and 10 Labour MPs and MEPs in addition to council leaders, Chambers of Commerce and many businesses from the Midlands.
Jerry Blackett, chief executive of Birmingham Chamber of Commerce Group, said: "Clearly, Birmingham Airport has the capacity to reduce the over-heating South-East immediately.
"For businesses in the West Midlands the development of Birmingham Airport as a major gateway is essential so that we can develop direct air links with places like the west coast of America and the Far East, particularly China, for the movement of people and goods."
In response to the letter Paul Kehoe, chief executive of Birmingham Airport, added: "Unlike other UK airports, we are in a unique position to grow in size straight away.
"As the debate rolls on over the shape of Britain's future aviation strategy, we could literally double the number of passengers through the airport tomorrow.
"In a few years' time, following the completion of our runway extension, we could handle over 36 million passengers a year."
To The Editor, Daily Telegraph, With the current debate raging about the future of the UK aviation, focus remains that a 'hub airport' in the South East offers a single solution to the future aviation needs of the United Kingdom. But this continues to favour a small, congested, and already economically strong part of the country. The current debate apparently ignores the immediate and future economic needs of the UK as a whole.
Economic rebalance around the regions will help resuscitate our wider economy. To secure growth, we need gateways close to the manufacturing, research and development of the Midlands and the north, linking these regions directly to BRIC and other emerging markets.
Evidence suggests overseas investors are discouraged from investing where there are no global links. For the UK, over-reliance on one large, full airport, risks national resilience and leads the rest of the world to believe there is just one gateway to this country.
Airports in our great industrial cities have huge spare capacity. In the West Midlands, Birmingham Airport’s current spare runway capacity is 27 million passengers per annum.
Birmingham is at the heart of the rail and motorway networks, and its airport is the most accessible in the UK. The Airport and NEC station will be the hub of the proposed HS2 network, potentially with half of the population less than one-hour away.
Longer-term, developing Birmingham as a major gateway at the centre of the UK would reduce unproductive surface travel time and leave Heathrow as a gateway for London and the South East.
With its proposed second runway, Birmingham's spare capacity could rise to over 50 million and create 50,000 jobs in an area with some of the UK’s highest pockets of persistent unemployment.
We call on Government to encourage and assist Airports to work with Local Enterprise Partnerships and stakeholders to declare longer-term options to benefit UK Plc. They should examine how the impact on local communities can be mitigated, and a balance be struck between employment, economic growth, and local nuisance.
Government infrastructure planning needs to both recognise airports and provide sufficient confidence for airports to be able to plan well into the future both their contribution and connectivity. But in so doing, recognise that UK aviation is not just a South East issue, but is a driver for regional economic growth – growth in areas that have languished behind the South East. Importantly, Government must support expansion of Birmingham’s airport to maximise the regional growth opportunity.
We must encourage growth now. The solution should lie at the heart of the UK in the Midlands.
Yours Sincerely,
Conservative West Midlands MPs
Mark Garnier
Michael Fabricant
Mark Pritchard
James Morris
Jesse Norman
Richard Shepherd
Aidan Burley
Andrew Griffiths
Chris Kelly
Harriett Baldwin
Paul Uppal
Robin Walker
Dan Byles
Marcus Jones
Daniel Kawczynski
Gavin Williamson
Margot James
Conservative West Midlands MEPs
Philip Bradbourne
Malcolm Harbour
Anthea McIntyre
Labour West Midlands MPs
Ian Austin
Gisela Stuart
Steven McCabe
Valerie Vaz
Dave Wright
Adrian Bailey
Tom Watson
Khalid Mahmood
Liam Byrne
Emma Reynolds
Labour Council Leaders
Cllr. David Jamieson (Solihull)
Cllr. Tim Oliver (Walsall)
Cllr. John Mutton (Coventry)
Cllr. Darren Cooper (Sandwell)
Conservative Council Leaders
Councillor Mike Whitby
(Leader of the Conservative Group and former Leader of Birmingham City Council)
Chambers of Commerce
Jerry Blackett
Chief Executive
Birmingham Chamber of Commerce Group
West Midlands businesses.
Neil Rami
Marketing Birmingham
Charlie Shiels
GeoPost UK LTD
Kate Beech
Noble-Lancaster Partnership
David Smith
Mezenet Solutions Ltd
David Sedgley
Roadlink International Ltd
Fay Goodman,
Goodmedia Limited
Dean Parnell
Sydney Mitchell LLP
Michael Ward
Gateley LLP
Steve Brittan
BSA Machine Tools Ltd
Parveen Mehta
Minor Weir Willis Ltd
Byron P Head
Rical Group
Graham Eden
Cognitor Ltd
Steve Allen
Mills & Reeve LLP
Simon Topman,
The Acme Whistle Co Ltd
Marc Stone
Stone Consulting Ltd
Adrian Burton
Erlsmede Consulting Ltd
Glenn Howells
Glenn Howells Architects Limited
Terry Gibbs
Harrow Green Ltd
Ian Greaves
KPMG LLP
Colin Leighfield
Wedge Group Galvanizing Ltd.
Paul Schnepper
Holiday Inn Birmingham Airport
Bill Almen
Al Fereej Trading UK Ltd
Stephen Jones
Clear Solutions Wealth & Tax Mangement Ltd
Professor Mary Carswell
Birmingham City University
Balwinder Dhanoa
Progress Care Solutions
K. Raindi
K&K Clothing
Clayton Shaw
Sampad
Ms Amina Bukhari
Acorn Primary School
Sangeeta Nazran
UK Property group
Levi Cheng
Guerbet Laboratories Ltd
Mrs Joy Farrall
Learning Impact International Ltd
Mark Tonks
Mark Tonks & Associates Ltd
Mark Petty,
NextiraOne UK
Rick Grain
Effigy Blinds Ltd
Ronnie Brown
Hotels.tv/Birmingham
David Caro
Federation of Small Businesses
Craig Errington
Wesleyan Assurance Society
Paul Thandi
The NEC Group
Richard Holt
Evans Derry Solicitors
Calum Nisbet,
City of Birmingham Symphony Orchestra
Source; http://www.coventryobserver.co.uk/2012/ ... 49119.html