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#1
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From
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. .... continues |
#2
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On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote:
From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#3
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Graeme Wall wrote:
On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote: From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? The government has deferred its announcement till after the referendum. And perhaps it will find some other reason after that. But assuming that it will eventually have no choice but to stop dithering, the chances are that it will turn out that both LHR and LGW have allowed for only modest contributions to the public transport improvements outside their perimeters. They've almost certainly assumed that most of the expensive enhancements to the local roads and railways will be paid for by the government, not the airports. And this could be the sticking point with both proposals. |
#4
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In message
-sept ember.org, at 08:00:27 on Mon, 25 Apr 2016, Recliner remarked: The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Is that figure net or gross of the fares the extra passengers will be paying? -- Roland Perry |
#5
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Roland Perry wrote:
In message -sept ember.org, at 08:00:27 on Mon, 25 Apr 2016, Recliner remarked: The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Is that figure net or gross of the fares the extra passengers will be paying? It's a capital cost, not an operating cost. And most road users don't pay fares. Even many bus users don't pay fares (ie, they have bus passes). |
#6
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On 25/04/2016 09:14, Recliner wrote:
Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote: From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? The government has deferred its announcement till after the referendum. And perhaps it will find some other reason after that. But assuming that it will eventually have no choice but to stop dithering, the chances are that it will turn out that both LHR and LGW have allowed for only modest contributions to the public transport improvements outside their perimeters. They've almost certainly assumed that most of the expensive enhancements to the local roads and railways will be paid for by the government, not the airports. And this could be the sticking point with both proposals. Costs at LGW, whoever pays, are going to be a lot less than at LHR. Not sure what the relative political cost will be. No leading politician has nailed himself to the mast of opposing Gatwick expansion so you will mainly be dealing with the usual nimbies, many of whom will moan but carry on voting tory anyway so they can effectively be ignored. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#7
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Graeme Wall wrote:
On 25/04/2016 09:14, Recliner wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote: From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? The government has deferred its announcement till after the referendum. And perhaps it will find some other reason after that. But assuming that it will eventually have no choice but to stop dithering, the chances are that it will turn out that both LHR and LGW have allowed for only modest contributions to the public transport improvements outside their perimeters. They've almost certainly assumed that most of the expensive enhancements to the local roads and railways will be paid for by the government, not the airports. And this could be the sticking point with both proposals. Costs at LGW, whoever pays, are going to be a lot less than at LHR. Not sure what the relative political cost will be. No leading politician has nailed himself to the mast of opposing Gatwick expansion so you will mainly be dealing with the usual nimbies, many of whom will moan but carry on voting tory anyway so they can effectively be ignored. The political costs will be less at Gatwick, but the transport costs may be even more than Heathrow. Doubling the number of airport passengers will probably require some major, and very expensive railway and motorway upgrades, including to the Brighton main line, M23 and M25. |
#8
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In message
-sept ember.org, at 08:27:00 on Mon, 25 Apr 2016, Recliner remarked: The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Is that figure net or gross of the fares the extra passengers will be paying? It's a capital cost, not an operating cost. And most road users don't pay fares. But how much of the £18bn is new roads, let alone ones TfL will be responsible for? Even many bus users don't pay fares (ie, they have bus passes). That's only a small part of the bus traffic at Heathrow. And remember HEx is paying for itself (both capital investment and operating costs). -- Roland Perry |
#9
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On 25/04/2016 09:37, Recliner wrote:
Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:14, Recliner wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote: From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? The government has deferred its announcement till after the referendum. And perhaps it will find some other reason after that. But assuming that it will eventually have no choice but to stop dithering, the chances are that it will turn out that both LHR and LGW have allowed for only modest contributions to the public transport improvements outside their perimeters. They've almost certainly assumed that most of the expensive enhancements to the local roads and railways will be paid for by the government, not the airports. And this could be the sticking point with both proposals. Costs at LGW, whoever pays, are going to be a lot less than at LHR. Not sure what the relative political cost will be. No leading politician has nailed himself to the mast of opposing Gatwick expansion so you will mainly be dealing with the usual nimbies, many of whom will moan but carry on voting tory anyway so they can effectively be ignored. The political costs will be less at Gatwick, but the transport costs may be even more than Heathrow. Doubling the number of airport passengers will probably require some major, and very expensive railway and motorway upgrades, including to the Brighton main line, M23 and M25. Have you seen the cost of moving the M25 underground? As for the rail links, wherever you put the runway it is going to be a major headache trying to add extra services into London, there isn't a major terminal that isn't nearing saturation point. The best option is to build it at Birmingham and use HS2 to get the passengers to and from London. -- Graeme Wall This account not read. |
#10
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Graeme Wall wrote:
On 25/04/2016 09:37, Recliner wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:14, Recliner wrote: Graeme Wall wrote: On 25/04/2016 09:00, Recliner wrote: From http://www.telegraph.co.uk/business/...rt-for-london/ Quote: Heathrow's controversial proposal to build a third runway would place a £16bn burden on Transport for London, the agency has said, as it would require upgrades to the road and railway networks that service the airport. TfL said Heathrow had "substantially underestimated" the impact of the extra runway, as it released a figure eight times higher than the £2.2bn that the airport had calculated. The transport authority instead estimates that the development, which could lead to heavier congestion on London's roads, buses and trains, will have a £18.4bn price tag. Heathrow has previously promised that £1.2bn would be raised through public contributions, with the airport spending another £1bn, leaving a shortfall of more than £16bn. ... continues Haven't they put off the announcement yet again? The government has deferred its announcement till after the referendum. And perhaps it will find some other reason after that. But assuming that it will eventually have no choice but to stop dithering, the chances are that it will turn out that both LHR and LGW have allowed for only modest contributions to the public transport improvements outside their perimeters. They've almost certainly assumed that most of the expensive enhancements to the local roads and railways will be paid for by the government, not the airports. And this could be the sticking point with both proposals. Costs at LGW, whoever pays, are going to be a lot less than at LHR. Not sure what the relative political cost will be. No leading politician has nailed himself to the mast of opposing Gatwick expansion so you will mainly be dealing with the usual nimbies, many of whom will moan but carry on voting tory anyway so they can effectively be ignored. The political costs will be less at Gatwick, but the transport costs may be even more than Heathrow. Doubling the number of airport passengers will probably require some major, and very expensive railway and motorway upgrades, including to the Brighton main line, M23 and M25. Have you seen the cost of moving the M25 underground? As for the rail links, wherever you put the runway it is going to be a major headache trying to add extra services into London, there isn't a major terminal that isn't nearing saturation point. The best option is to build it at Birmingham and use HS2 to get the passengers to and from London. Which may be exactly what happens if both the LHR and LGW options fail on cost grounds. I don't think either plan allows realistic costs for the external public transport enhancements, with both plans assuming that the public sector will pick up those costs. As for rail links, with Heathrow, Crossrail will have to pick up most of the extra passengers to London, with the new western rail link picking up those headed towards the west. There will probably also need to be a link to Staines to connect to the SWT routes. |
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Heathrow runway will create £16bn | London Transport | |||
Heathrow runway will create £16bn | London Transport | |||
Heathrow runway will create £16bn | London Transport | |||
Heathrow runway will create £16bn | London Transport | |||
Heathrow runway will create £16bn | London Transport |