TheLocalYokel
Honorary Member Of Forums4airports
- Jan 14, 2009
- 15,711
- 343
- IMPORTANT!! To reduce spam, we request that you make a post soon after completing your registration. We request you keep your account active by posting regularly. Inactive accounts risk being deleted.
- Yes
- Admin
- #1
Those who follow aviation generally and Bristol Airport in particular will probably be aware that the past 35 years have been a period of almost unbroken growth for the airport, from 1986 when fewer than 500,000 passengers were handled to 2019 when the total will be just under nine million. The last five years have seen annual passenger numbers rise by over 40%.
The BRS ownership and management have a short to mid-term aim of handling 12 mppa - by the middle of the coming decade if things move as they hope - with 20 mppa a longer term aspiration. With the 12 mppa figure in mind they submitted infrastructure expansion plan applications to the local authority to enable such a number to be handled, together with a request for the current 10 mppa planning limit to be raised to 12 mppa. A year later and the local authority has still not set a date to determine the merits of the planning and annual capacity cap applications.
So clearly the first hurdle to be overcome if the airport is to progress is the ability to grow beyond 10 mppa. There are also ancillary issues relating to planning with limits set on night movements and a night noise quota, both of which are very close to being breached in the summer period (BST). The airport has asked the local authority for the seasonal limits, with winter (GMT) being generally underused, to be removed and spread throughout the year but with no overall increase. Within the last couple of years the airport also successfully applied to become a level 3 slot coordinated airport but only in summer and only between the hours of 2300 and 0700 in order to better regulate the night movements.
BRS also saw the demise of two of its important airlines in 2019 - flybmi and Thomas Cook - which together accounted for well over half a million passengers a year. Some of that lost capacity has already been replaced and more is due to be put back in 2020 with TUI and easyJet expanding their programmes.
Climate change is becoming an ever more dominant subject, with the aviation industry clearly in the sights of activists and others who are concerned. The industry is often disproportionately blamed for its part in producing greenhouse gas emissions but there is no doubt that the issue is beginning to strike a chord with many people, so that might become a brake on aviation growth across the country.
Brexit is another uncertainty at the moment when it comes to future travel between the UK and the European Union.
Hopefully a shorter term issue is the Boeing 737MAX but its problems do seem to be causing some airlines headaches in sourcing sufficient replacement aircraft whether leased, bought or ACMI. Ryanair appears to have reduced its presence at some airports because of the issue.
So whilst the last three issues are generalised, and do not potentially affect BRS in isolation, they could play a part in the airport's fortunes over the coming year, with some of them probably in evidence beyond 2020.
However, it's abundantly clear that by far the most important factor is the current passenger cap of 10 mppa. We might not get a final answer to that in 2020 if the local authority rejects the airport's application and the latter then appeals to the Planning Inspectorate whose decision would not be made known almost certainly until some time in 2021.
If any appeal was to fail the owners would be stuck with a vibrant facility unable to grow further because of external decisions unrelated to the health of the business.
The BRS ownership and management have a short to mid-term aim of handling 12 mppa - by the middle of the coming decade if things move as they hope - with 20 mppa a longer term aspiration. With the 12 mppa figure in mind they submitted infrastructure expansion plan applications to the local authority to enable such a number to be handled, together with a request for the current 10 mppa planning limit to be raised to 12 mppa. A year later and the local authority has still not set a date to determine the merits of the planning and annual capacity cap applications.
So clearly the first hurdle to be overcome if the airport is to progress is the ability to grow beyond 10 mppa. There are also ancillary issues relating to planning with limits set on night movements and a night noise quota, both of which are very close to being breached in the summer period (BST). The airport has asked the local authority for the seasonal limits, with winter (GMT) being generally underused, to be removed and spread throughout the year but with no overall increase. Within the last couple of years the airport also successfully applied to become a level 3 slot coordinated airport but only in summer and only between the hours of 2300 and 0700 in order to better regulate the night movements.
BRS also saw the demise of two of its important airlines in 2019 - flybmi and Thomas Cook - which together accounted for well over half a million passengers a year. Some of that lost capacity has already been replaced and more is due to be put back in 2020 with TUI and easyJet expanding their programmes.
Climate change is becoming an ever more dominant subject, with the aviation industry clearly in the sights of activists and others who are concerned. The industry is often disproportionately blamed for its part in producing greenhouse gas emissions but there is no doubt that the issue is beginning to strike a chord with many people, so that might become a brake on aviation growth across the country.
Brexit is another uncertainty at the moment when it comes to future travel between the UK and the European Union.
Hopefully a shorter term issue is the Boeing 737MAX but its problems do seem to be causing some airlines headaches in sourcing sufficient replacement aircraft whether leased, bought or ACMI. Ryanair appears to have reduced its presence at some airports because of the issue.
So whilst the last three issues are generalised, and do not potentially affect BRS in isolation, they could play a part in the airport's fortunes over the coming year, with some of them probably in evidence beyond 2020.
However, it's abundantly clear that by far the most important factor is the current passenger cap of 10 mppa. We might not get a final answer to that in 2020 if the local authority rejects the airport's application and the latter then appeals to the Planning Inspectorate whose decision would not be made known almost certainly until some time in 2021.
If any appeal was to fail the owners would be stuck with a vibrant facility unable to grow further because of external decisions unrelated to the health of the business.