Richmond Borough Council shows Heathrow 3rd runway could cost UK economy another £25 billion over 60 years

Government claims for the economic benefit of expanding Heathrow do not include the costs of the improved public transport links needed to keep road traffic at current levels.  A 3rd runway is expected to add around 100,000 trips per day. Heathrow has pledged (though how they could achieve that is not clear) that road traffic levels will not increase with a 3rd runway. This would mean 70% of journeys to and from the airport being made by public transport. Today’s figure is 40%. A 3-runway Heathrow might have 26 million more passengers per year when full, than a 2-runway airport. That means the current cost projections for new public transport links (to cater for a 2-runway airport) are insufficient. That would mean more delays for passengers arriving at the airport whether by road or rail. Using the Government’s own approach these delays could cost the economy around £25bn over a 60-year period. This would reduce the DfT’s claimed benefit from a 3rd runway from its current £74bn (which already excludes most costs) to £49bn. The DfT’s own assessment shows the actual economic benefit of the runway not to be £74bn to be more like zero (£-2.5 to +£2.9 bn over 60 years for whole UK).
.

 

NEWS: ‘Benefits’ of Expansion cut by £25bn as public transport improvements fall short

12.6.2018  (Richmond Borough Council)

Government claims for the economic benefit of expanding Heathrow do not include the costs of the improved public transport links needed to keep road traffic at current levels.

Campaigners are calling for guarantees that the taxpayer will not be expected to meet the costs of new rail infrastructure required for a three-runway airport.

A third runway is expected to add around 100,000 trips a day. Heathrow has pledged that road traffic levels will not increase with a third runway. This would mean seven out of ten journeys to and from the airport being made by public transport. Today’s figure is four in ten.

Transport for London estimate that expenditure of £10bn-£15bn is required for new surface access. But this includes the cost of new southern and western rail links which are required to cope with a two-runway airport.

Current forecasts for passengers ending their journey at a two-runway Heathrow show these rising by 60 percent by 2050 – up from 55 million in 2016 to 88million.

A third runway would generate a further 26 million passengers a year by 2050 – more than double the current number.

This means that the current cost projections for new public transport links are insufficient. The outcome would then be more delays for passengers arriving at the airport whether by road or rail.

Using the Government’s own approach these delays could cost the economy around £25bn over a 60-year period.

This would reduce the claimed benefit from expansion from its current £74bn to £49bn.

Peter Willan of the Richmond Heathrow Campaign, who compiled the figures, said:

“The Government will fail to keep road traffic at current levels because they have not planned for the additional surface access improvements that will be essential for a three runway airport.

“This will mean more congestion, more delays and more air pollution. Using the Government’s own approach we put the cost of these failings at £25bn.

“The Government must confirm that they will not saddle the taxpayer with this £25bn funding gap. Either Heathrow pays or their customers do.

‘Even a congestion charge scheme won’t get people out of their cars unless the public transport infrastructure is in place. “

Richmond Council Leader Gareth Roberts said:

“The Government’s figures don’t add up. By understating the true costs of the infrastructure needed to cope with an additional 100,000 daily road journeys and passenger numbers double what they are today, they are inflating the claimed economic benefit from expansion.

“They also run the risk of allowing a third runway to be built without the additional public transport capacity needed. In this case Heathrow should be barred from opening the runway until the new provision is put in place.

”This is a mess that can be avoided. The Government must face up now to the hard truth that this runway is simply unbuildable on grounds of cost, increased congestion and worsening air quality.”

The surface access demand figures and costs are based on published Department for Transport data and the Government’s WebTAG approach for calculating economic benefits. The full report is available at www.richmondheathrowcampaign.org

Richmond Council is part of a four-borough alliance opposed to expansion including Wandsworth, Hillingdon and Windsor and Maidenhead Councils.

For media information, contact Elinor Firth on 020 8487 5159 OR Peter Willan on 07530 266436

Latest news from Richmond Council

www.richmond.gov.uk/press_office

facebook

www.twitter.com/lbrut

 

https://www.richmond.gov.uk/council/news/press_office/older_news/june_2018/benefits_of_expansion_cut_25bn_public_transport_improvements_fall_short

.

.

https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/government/uploads/system/uploads/attachment_data/file/711589/addendum-to-the-updated-appraisal-report-airport-capacity-in-the-south-east.pdf

.

.

 

.