Heathrow is submitting evidence to the Airports
Commission challenging Gatwick’s claims that it is able to support long-haul
flights to growth markets.
This follows the recent news that Air
China is suspending flights from Gatwick to Beijing ,
the withdrawal of Korean Air and the cancellation of the proposed Garuda Indonesia flight from Gatwick to Jakarta this winter. In
total, 20 long-haul airlines have withdrawn from Gatwick in the last five
years.
Direct long-haul flights are critical
to supporting trade and growth. UK
businesses trade 20 times more with emerging markets that have daily flights
than those with less frequent or no direct service.
Gatwick maintains that long-haul
flights do not need to operate from a hub airport. Yet, in the ten years that
Heathrow has been full, Gatwick has failed to deliver flights to long-haul
business destinations. Airlines that have been unable to access slots at
Heathrow have tried and failed to make long-haul flights from Gatwick work.
Long-haul
airlines that have withdrawn all flights from Gatwick since 2008:
Year |
Airline |
From |
To |
Status |
2008 |
American Airlines |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2008 |
Oasis |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2008 |
Continental
Airlines |
Gatwick |
NY &
Houston |
Cancelled |
2008 |
Zoom Airlines |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2008 |
Nationwide Airlines |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2009 |
Air |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2009 |
|
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2009 |
Fly Globespan |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2010 |
|
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2010 |
Mexicana |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2011 |
|
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2011 |
Sunwing Airlines |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
|
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
Air |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
Air |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
Delta |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
Cubana |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2012 |
Korean Air |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2013 |
US Airways |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2013 |
Air |
Gatwick |
|
Cancelled |
2013 |
Garuda |
Gatwick |
|
Delayed |
Heathrow
Chief Executive Colin Matthews said:
“There is no need for a crystal ball to
test Gatwick’s claims that it can provide long-haul flights when we have the
hard evidence of ten years of failure. While Heathrow has been full, airline
after airline has tried without success to make long-haul flights from Gatwick
work. Gatwick doesn’t have a flight to New
York , one of the world’s most important business and
financial centres, so it’s not surprising it can’t support routes to the less
popular and more distant destinations that will be critical to future trade.
“Gatwick’s proposal to prevent Heathrow
expanding, while adding a new runway at its own airport, endangers Britain ’s
future competitiveness. It is a zero-hub solution that will lead to an
irreversible decline in Britain ’s
international connections. Only a hub airport with the scale to compete
internationally can provide the long-haul flights the UK needs.”
Heathrow is not opposed to growth at
Gatwick as long as it is alongside building an expanded hub airport. A new
runway at Gatwick alone would deliver neither the flights that Britain needs
nor the £100bn of economic benefits and more than 70,000 jobs that a third
runway at Heathrow will.
Many of the airlines which have pulled
out of Gatwick instead operate flights to economic competitors in France , Germany
and Holland .
The issue is not a lack of demand from London ,
but that without levelling out the daily peaks and troughs in local demand with
transfer passengers, Gatwick cannot fill long-haul aircraft and compete with Paris , Frankfurt, and Amsterdam . Some of Gatwick’s flights to Vietnam , one of the last long-haul services to
an emerging market from the airport, are now flying via Frankfurt
to pick up more passengers to make the flight viable.
Hub airports, where local passengers
combine with transfer passengers, are uniquely important in allowing airlines
to fly to growth destinations. Heathrow serves more than 70 global destinations
that are not served by another UK
airport and is one of only six airports world-wide that serves more than 50
long-haul destinations. This gives UK
consumers a greater choice of destinations and makes Britain a more attractive location
for international business. This source of competitive advantage for the UK cannot be sustained
by Gatwick’s proposals.
There are no European countries that
have two hubs and no successful examples of what Gatwick is proposing. Analysis
by York Aviation shows that adding capacity at other London
airports but not at a hub would mean fewer routes than today, while adding new runway
capacity at a single hub would mean London and
the UK
could add more than 100 new routes1.
Airlines say they won’t move to Gatwick
or Stansted2. Despite Gatwick and Stansted having spare capacity and
lower charges neither has been able to attract the long-haul flights that
Heathrow does. Over the period in which Gatwick lost 20 long-haul airlines it
gained just six that are still operating, mostly to leisure destinations –
Thomson, Monarch, Caribbean, Gambia Bird, Vietnam, and Iraqi.