News story: Government backs Heathrow expansion to kickstart economic growth
Plan could create over 100,000 direct jobs, boost a better-connected
British economy by billions, and lead to cheaper fares and fewer
delays for families as part of Plan for Change.
Expansion must
be delivered in line with UK’s legal, environmental and climate
obligations.
Working people and businesses across Britain will
benefit from a government going “further and faster” to kickstart
economic growth, as the Chancellor today [29 January] announced the
government’s support for a third runway at Heathrow.
Speaking
to an audience of business chiefs at Siemens in North Oxfordshire this
morning, the Chancellor set out the government’s latest set of reforms
to kickstart economic growth and drive up living standards across the
UK by driving investment, getting Britain building and tackling
regulatory barriers. This included the announcement that the
government supports and is inviting proposals for a third runway at
Heathrow.
The Chancellor confirmed that the government will
move at speed to review the Airports National Policy Statement (ANPS).
This provides the basis for decision making on granting development
consent for a new runway at Heathrow, to ensure that any scheme is
delivered in line with our legal, environmental and climate
obligations. In her speech, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves
said:
I have always been clear that a third runway at Heathrow
would unlock further growth, boost investment, increase exports, and
make the UK more open and more connected as part of our Plan for
Change.
And now the case is stronger than ever because our
reforms to the economy - like speeding up our planning system, and our
strengthened plans to modernise UK airspace - mean the delivery of
this project is set up for success.
So I can confirm today that
this Government supports a third runway at Heathrow and is inviting
proposals to be brought forward by the summer.
As well as
creating over 100,000 jobs in the local area and many more indirectly,
research published today by Frontier Economics finds that 60% of the
economic boost from a third runway would be felt by areas outside of
London and the South East – putting more money in the pockets of
working people across the UK through lower fares and greater choice
for passengers as part of our Plan for Change.
During the
speech, Reeves announced that the Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander
is expected to take decisions on expansion plans at Gatwick and Luton
shortly, and that the government will work with Doncaster Council and
the Mayor of South Yorkshire to support their efforts to reopen
Doncaster Sheffield Airport as a thriving regional airport.
The Chancellor also announced that a new partnership between
global logistics giant Prologis and East Midlands Airport to build a
new advanced manufacturing park within the East Midlands Freeport zone
to unlock £1 billion of investment and 2,000 jobs. It follows this
government’s swift approval of similarly stalled plans for London City
Airport to expand to nine million passengers per year by 2031 and a
£1. 1 billion investment at Stansted Airport to extend its terminal
and create 5,000 jobs.
After delivering stability to the
public finances and wider economy as the basic precondition for
economic growth, the pace of investment and reform demonstrates the
government’s willingness to secure the future of the UK’s world-class
aviation sector and the sustainable growth it can provide. Air freight
represented 57% of the UK’s non-EU exports by value in 2023, with over
60% of freight coming through the UK doing so through Heathrow.
International connectivity also supports vital tourism and business
links, with overseas visitors spending £31 billion on their visits to
the UK in 2023 and 15 million business travellers using Heathrow in
the same year.
It comes after reforms to speed up the
planning system and a presumption to ‘back the builders over the
blockers’ were set out by the Prime Minister Keir Starmer last week.
The government has committed to making decisions on 150 major economic
infrastructure applications over this Parliament, having already made
decisions on multiple significant projects within its first six months
spanning airports, data centres, energy farms, and major housing
developments. The Planning and Infrastructure Bill to be introduced in
Spring will enact further sweeping reforms and take an axe to the red
tape that slows down approval of infrastructure projects.
Alongside these reforms and plans to modernise UK airspace,
the government is taking great strides in transitioning to greener
aviation. Sustainable Aviation Fuel reduces CO2 emissions compared to
fossil jet fuel by around 70% and the Chancellor announced that the
government is supporting UK producers by investing £63 million in
2025-26 into the Advanced Fuels Fund and setting out details of a
Revenue Certainty Mechanism. This will support investment and high-
skilled green jobs in plants across the UK - with previous winners of
the Fund ranging from across the north of England to South Wales - and
follows the Sustainable Aviation Fuel Mandate coming into law at the
start of 2025. Taken together, our commitments to SAF will support
thousands of jobs in places like Teesside and Humberside, bring down
our transport emissions, and help make the UK a clean energy
superpower as part of our Plan for Change.
The government is
also assessing options for privately financing the Lower Thames
Crossing, which will improve connectivity across vital ports and
alleviate congestion as goods to be exported come from across the
country to markets overseas.
In further recognition that the
Government’s clean energy superpower mission is helping to drive the
UK’s economic growth mission, Reeves announced that the government
will designate new Marine Protected Areas to enable offshore wind,
whilst protecting our marine environment. In doing so, barriers to 16
gigawatts of offshore wind will be unblocked – as much electricity as
was produced by all gas power plants in 2024 – and up to £30 billion
of private investment in homegrown clean power will be unlocked,
creating thousands of good clean energy jobs in the offshore wind
sector in areas like East Anglia and Yorkshire.
A new
approach to the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor - a centre of
innovation which could become Europe’s answer to Silicon Valley - will
be spearheaded by Sir Patrick Vallance as a Ministerial Champion. The
economic potential of this region will be unlocked through leveraging
the strengths it boasts in sectors across Britain’s new modern
Industrial Strategy, from life sciences and tech to advanced
manufacturing.
The Chancellor set out the government’s plans
to increase investment across the whole of the UK. She stressed that
the government would do more to support city regions and local leaders
outside of London and the South East, in recognition that bringing the
productivity of major cities like Manchester, Birmingham and Leeds to
the national average would deliver an extra £33 billion in output for
the UK economy.
Reeves confirmed the backing of the Mayor of
Greater Manchester’s plans for the regeneration of the area around Old
Trafford, including new housing and commercial development, and the
new approach to planning decisions on land around stations, changing
the default to yes. The Office for Investment is expanding its support
to local leaders across the UK to help develop and promote their
investment plans, and new strategic partnerships from the National
Wealth Fund (NWF) will provide deeper, more focused support for city
regions starting in Glasgow, West Yorkshire, the West Midlands, and
Greater Manchester.
NWF and Aviva have today invested £65
million in Connected Kerb to back plans for the electric vehicle smart
charging infrastructure company to expand its UK EV charging network
towards 40,000 sockets - up from 9,000 as of the end of 2024. This
substantial investment into the UK’s public charging infrastructure –
one of the NWF’s priority sectors – is crucial for delivering the
forecast requirement of at least 300,000 public EV chargers by 2030.
NWF is also investing £28 million in Cornish Metals to provide the raw
materials to be used in solar panels, wind turbines and electric
vehicles, supporting growth and jobs in the South West of England.
Reeves announced that the Treasury will review the Green Book
and how it is being used to provide objective, transparent advice on
public investment across the country, including outside London and the
South East. There were also further details announced on Investment
Zones, with the Wrexham and Flintshire Investment Zone to focus on the
area’s strengths in advanced manufacturing. Backed by the likes of
Airbus and JCB, this is expected to crowd in £1 billion of private
investment over a decade and create up to 6,000 jobs.
The
Chancellor said that the Business and Trade Secretary Jonathan
Reynolds will visit India next month to relaunch talks on a free-trade
agreement and bilateral investment treaty, She set out that the
guiding principle the government will take in its approach to trade is
acting in the national interest of Britain’s economy, its businesses
and working people. A trade deal with India, as one of the fastest
growing economies in the world and one which is projected to be the
fourth largest global importer by 2035, is in line with this approach.
Notes to Editors
The Chancellor’s speech can be found on GOV.
UK As part of the ANPS review, government will engage the Climate
Change Committee on how aviation expansion can be made consistent with
our net zero framework.
Stakeholder reaction Kenton Jarvis, CEO
of easyJet, said:
I welcome the Government’s pro-growth agenda
and their recognition of the importance of aviation and the crucial
role it plays as an enabler of economic growth. As an island nation,
this industry provides much-needed connectivity as well as creating
many skilled jobs which contribute to the wider prosperity of the
country.
Expansion at Heathrow will provide consumer and
economic benefits and represents a unique opportunity for easyJet to
operate from the airport at scale for the first time and bring with it
lower fares for consumers.
Paul Weston, Regional Head of
Prologis UK said:
The Chancellor’s announcements reflect a
drive to support enhanced UK economic growth, which underscores
Prologis’ global partnership with East Midlands Airport to unlock
investment at the nation’s only inland Freeport site.
We are
focused on delivering a new Advanced Manufacturing and Logistics park
at pace and in partnership, harnessing the site’s unique
potential.
Prologis, as a partner of choice, continues to
commit to opportunities across the UK that underpin growth, building
the foundations that support economic opportunities and on-the-ground
benefits, with central, regional and local government.
Gordon
Sanghera, Chief Executive Officer, Oxford Nanopore Technologies
said:
The attention given to the innovation potential in the
Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor is welcome. This is an opportunity to
strengthen the UK’s tech infrastructure, expand access to talent, and
attract investment—the foundations of innovation—so we can turn more
pioneering UK life science start-ups into global scale-ups. The UK can
be the best place in the world for breakthrough
technologies.
Tim Knowles, Founder and Managing Director of FI
Real Estate Management, said:
As an investor in Wrexham for
almost 20 years, we’re delighted to see the announcement that Wrexham
and Flintshire will receive Advanced Manufacturing Investment Zone
status, with three of our schemes on Wrexham Industrial Estate –
Wrexham 1M, Wrexham 152, and Bridgeway Centre – forming part of the
designated zone.
Across these sites, we’ll be investing £115m
to create new, high-quality industrial accommodation, supporting the
creation of over 1,000 new jobs and delivering an estimated economic
value of £1. 2bn in Wrexham over the next 10 years.
Mark
Turner, JCB’s Chief Operating Officer said:
JCB has been a
prominent feature of the industrial and economic landscape in Wrexham
and Flintshire for over 45 years. Innovation is the lifeblood of our
business and we welcome the creation of an Investment Zone in North
Wales and hope that it will attract many other businesses to the area.
As an advanced manufacturer of precision engineering components, JCB
Transmissions looks forward to other advanced manufacturing businesses
coming to the area. This could go a long way towards building the
supply chain resilience of existing manufacturing businesses in the
area, such as JCB.
We place a lot of values on skills in our
business and we look forward to the Investment Zone positively
supporting skills development in the future. JCB continues to invest
in our business in Wrexham and today’s IZ announcement bodes well for
the economic development of the area in the future.