Heathrow Expansion: Surface Access [Sir Edward Leigh in the
Chair] 4.00 pm Sarah Olney (Richmond Park) (LD) I beg
to move, That this House has considered Heathrow expansion
and surface access. It is a great pleasure to conduct my
first Westminster Hall debate. I thank the Minister for
his...Request free trial
Heathrow Expansion: Surface Access
[Sir in the Chair]
4.00 pm
-
(Richmond Park)
(LD)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered Heathrow expansion and
surface access.
It is a great pleasure to conduct my first Westminster Hall
debate. I thank the Minister for his engagement on this
issue, which will greatly impact upon my constituents in
Richmond Park and north Kingston. I welcome every
opportunity to discuss the matter of Heathrow expansion
with the Department for Transport.
On 2 February, the Government launched consultations
relating to the proposed expansion of Heathrow airport.
While many issues relating to the decision to build a third
runway concern me, this afternoon I shall remain focused on
the surface access strategy, which is not yet something we
are able to consider.
Heathrow airport has pledged that its landside road traffic
will be no greater than it is today if planning permission
is granted for a third runway. It is not entirely clear
which day “today” is supposed to refer to, but logic
demands that 2 February should be treated as “today” for
the purpose of benchmarking, being the date that the
national policy statement was published. If the pledge has
any prospect of being honoured, the public have a right to
know what benchmarks are being used to measure landside
road traffic.
Assuming that “today” is in fact 2 February, will the
Minister confirm that detailed measurement and analysis of
the landside road traffic was conducted on that day, for
the purposes of comparison? Will he further confirm the
extent of the area that was included within the measurement
boundaries; whether that included my constituency; and that
that analysis will be published without delay, so that the
information is available to the public during the
consultation period?
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Dr (Twickenham)
(Con)
I congratulate the hon. Lady on securing this important
debate and agree with the important points she is making.
Does she agree that on 2 February, pollutant levels should
have been documented for the NPS? In London, we have
already breached our annual air pollution limits.
-
The hon. Lady is absolutely right. Air quality is another
very important issue, alongside surface access, when
considering whether the decision to expand Heathrow is the
right one or not. The focus of my attention today is the
surface access strategy, but she is correct, and I shall
address that point later.
If, by some chance, the analysis of current landside road
traffic was not carried out on 2 February or on any other
day prior to today, will the Minister give details of
exactly how Heathrow airport will be held to its pledge
that there will be no increase in landside road traffic? I
am sure he will agree that the possible increase in road
traffic across a wide area of west London is a source of
considerable anxiety for local residents, and that evidence
of the Government’s commitment to hold Heathrow airport to
its pledge that there will be no increase in traffic would
set a great many minds at ease.
-
(Brentford and
Isleworth) (Lab)
May I also congratulate the hon. Lady, my neighbouring MP,
on securing this debate, so soon after being elected. Does
she agree that many minds would be put at ease by knowing
not only that Heathrow will not need to increase road
access but that the crazy proposal to expand the M4 from
four lanes to eight between junctions 3 and 2 will be
pushed into the long grass as a result?
-
I thank the hon. Lady for her intervention. We really need
to see detailed plans of the surface access strategy before
we can properly consider the consultation.
On 23 February, the Environmental Audit Committee published
its follow-up report to the Airports Commission report,
looking at carbon emissions, air quality and noise. The
report directly quotes the Secretary of State for
Transport’s evidence to the Committee. He said:
“the air quality issue, even around Heathrow itself, is
about the traffic on our roads.”
In his statement to the House of Commons on 2 February, the
Secretary of State said:
“Heathrow airport will be required to demonstrate that the
scheme can be delivered within legal air quality
obligations.”—[Official Report, 2 February 2017; Vol. 620,
c. 1182.]
It seems crucial therefore that the questions surrounding
surface access links to Heathrow airport are resolved
before any undertakings are made in relation to air quality
targets. The Environmental Audit Committee agrees, stating
in one of its conclusions:
“The Government has not yet published a comprehensive
assessment of the infrastructure requirements of an
expanded Heathrow, including an outline of costs,
responsibilities and accountability. The Government must
publish such an assessment and consult on it before
publishing a final National Policy Statement.”
Will the Minister today confirm that his Department is
working on detailed plans for surface access upgrade, in
response to the Environmental Audit Committee’s report, and
that those will be made public before the consultation
period ends? I am sure he will agree that no meaningful
consultation can take place on the ability of Heathrow
airport to meet its landside traffic pledge or its air
quality targets without publication of those plans.
-
The hon. Lady is absolutely right about the need for the
Government to be clear. Yesterday I went to Hounslow civic
centre to see the Department for Transport’s exhibition on
the proposals there and talk to very senior and expert
officials of the DFT about the surface access plans. I was
surprised that they could not answer questions about the
expectation of traffic increases, given the different types
of traffic that will be going to Heathrow should expansion
go ahead, with a 47% increase in air traffic. Does she
agree that that makes the consultation somewhat of a sham?
-
I thank the hon. Lady for once again underlining the
importance of making available these plans to the public in
order that a meaningful consultation can take place.
Details of these plans may well affect how people respond
to the consultation. One project being discussed as part of
the surface access plans is the southern rail access
project to improve rail links to Heathrow airport. My
constituents living in Mortlake and Barnes will be
particularly interested to know whether rail upgrade plans
will increase the length of time that level crossing gates
block the roads in their area. One current estimate is that
Mortlake is currently blocked for three quarters of an
hour, every hour, to allow trains to cross. Residents are
entitled to know whether the plans for Heathrow expansion
mean that level crossing gates will be down for even
longer. That will surely affect how they respond to the
consultation.
Of particular interest to those who live not only in my
constituency and the surrounding areas but much further
afield is the cost of surface access upgrade and how that
is to be funded. In the absence thus far of any detailed
figures from the Department for Transport, our best guess
of the cost of surface access upgrades is that provided by
Transport for London, which estimates the cost at between
£15 billion and £20 billion. Heathrow has committed to
meeting just £1 billion of that cost, leaving a black hole
of between £14 billion and £19 billion. I have twice
challenged the Secretary of State to tell me how that
shortfall will be funded, but both times he has responded
only to say that he does not accept TfL’s figures. That is
all very well, and I eagerly await the publication of his
Department’s own estimates, as requested earlier, but he
has failed to answer the key part of the question about who
will pay for that cost.
The business case for Heathrow expansion rests on
delivering £61 billion of benefit to the UK over 60 years.
That number has already been substantially revised
downwards from Heathrow’s previous estimate of £147 billion
over 60 years. If it should be proved that up to £19
billion of costs have not been brought into consideration,
the business case for expanding Heathrow weakens even
further. Should Heathrow airport be required to fund the
bulk of the surface access upgrade itself, it may find it
difficult to interest investors and shareholders in its
revised business case. If the costs of funding upgraded
surface access should fall to the taxpayer, that may affect
the level of support that Heathrow expansion is currently
enjoying around the country. The public are entitled to ask
whether or not that additional £19 billion could be better
spent elsewhere, which is why it is vital that these
detailed plans are available before the end of the
consultation period.
One other point I would like to make is about freight.
There are warm words in the national policy statement about
increasing the number of cycling and walking journeys made
to the airport and of moving passenger journeys on to
public transport.
-
(Kingston and Surbiton)
(Con)
Does the hon. Lady agree that they are indeed warm words
because, as anyone who has children knows—I do not,
actually—a family of four will undoubtedly drive or get a
taxi to the airport and not use a cycle or a train?
-
(in the Chair)
Order. Just as a matter of courtesy, hon. Members wishing
to intervene should arrive on time for the beginning of the
debate.
-
I thank the hon. Member for Kingston and Surbiton (James
Berry) for his intervention. I accept that there will
always be people who choose to make their passenger
journeys to the airport by car, and I agree that walking
journeys are not likely, given the vast expanse of Heathrow
airport and the limited amount of housing around it, so
they surely are no more than warm words. However, I would
like to think that a great deal more could be done to move
passenger journeys to the airport on to public transport,
and I support any plans that enable that to happen.
The economic case for expanding Heathrow airport also rests
on being able to increase the amount of freight that will
pass through the airport. It is difficult to imagine that
that increased freight will be transported to the airport
on the backs of bicycles or carried on the tube. Can the
Minister confirm that the plans for no net increase in road
journeys will therefore include a sufficient reduction in
passenger journeys to compensate for the increased number
of freight movements, and that steps will be taken to
ensure, where possible, that those freight movements are
made by low-emission vehicles to limit the impact on air
pollution?
In conclusion, I believe that the Government need to
produce without delay their own detailed estimates for the
upgrade of surface access to an expanded Heathrow airport
in order for the public to be properly informed during the
consultation process. I would go as far as to say that the
consultation process will be completely invalid if the
Department’s own figures for the surface access upgrade are
not made available for the public to consider. All the most
critical elements of the decision to award planning
permission—traffic, air quality and cost—will be affected
by those plans. I call on the Minister to respond urgently
to that request.
4.11 pm
-
The Minister of State, Department for Transport (Mr John
Hayes)
What a delight it is to serve under your chairmanship, Sir
Edward, and to respond to this short but significant debate.
I congratulate the hon. Member for Richmond Park (Sarah
Olney) on securing it. I know that she cares about this issue
a great deal. She follows in the footsteps of a Member who,
one might say, was a champion of this cause.
Other Members who have contributed—notably my hon. Friend the
Member for Twickenham (Dr Mathias), but also my hon. Friend
the Member for Kingston and Surbiton (James Berry) and the
hon. Member for Brentford and Isleworth (Ruth Cadbury)—have
raised these matters regularly and vehemently. It is right
that hon. Members should do that. All those I have mentioned
are tireless workers for the interests of their constituents,
and they are right to press the Government in the way they
have done and continue to do.
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Dr Mathias
I greatly appreciate my right hon. Friend the Minister’s
words. Does he agree that there is now cross-party unity on
the need for better information in these consultations, as
was so ably expressed by the hon. Member for Richmond Park
(Sarah Olney)?
-
Mr Hayes
Yes. It is important, as I said, that the Government are held
to account. That is the purpose of debates such as this. I
take a plain view about these debates—I do not know whether
all Ministers follow my lead, but would that they did,
frankly—which is that they must have a purpose beyond the
Minister coming with some prepared speech that he reads out,
rather like reading the lesson at church, and being
unaffected by the contributions made before he speaks. It is
important that these debates are a proper opportunity to
challenge the Government, to scrutinise what we are doing and
to elicit from the Minister a meaningful response, which is
what I hope to give today.
To that end, let me start by saying that there is a proper
debate to be had about the character of the consultation. We
have begun to speak today about whether, in the national
policy statement, we should have come to a conclusion about
the detailed plans for surface access, and should then have
consulted on those plans, or whether one should have a
consultation based on the NPS and, from that consultation,
discern what is right and go into rather more detail later.
That is about how one sees a consultation. One criticism
often made of consultations is that they are foregone
conclusions. This one clearly is not a foregone conclusion;
it is a legitimate consultation exercise, designed, as I have
said, to give people the opportunity to make their case, to
take their argument to the Government, and the Government
will then cogitate, consider and draw conclusions. Hon.
Members on both sides of the House would have had every right
to complain had we come to a definitive conclusion about
these things prior to the consultation and then gone through
the motions of a consultation without meaning to take any
notice of what local people said. That is not our approach,
and it is certainly not my approach.
That said, it is important that we recognise some of the
arguments that have been made in this debate, so let us be
clear: it is fundamentally important in relation to expansion
that Heathrow provides a detailed application, built on a
detailed transport assessment, including a surface access
strategy. That should be part of the process as we go
forward, and it will be. That detailed analysis should be
based on the latest available evidence on how the
requirements in the airports national policy statement will
be met. It is important to appreciate that, as we move to the
point at which Heathrow Airport Ltd lodges its planning
application, it will be expected to provide that kind of
detailed analysis as part of the planning process.
Moreover, the Government have been clear that it would be for
Heathrow to meet the full costs of any surface access that
was required only for airport expansion. That is set out in
the draft airports national policy statement. As has been
said, we are carrying out a full consultation, because we
want to hear everyone’s views about the detail of that, but I
repeat that we are committed to the principle that Heathrow
must meet the costs of any surface access changes
necessitated by its plans for expansion.
Let me go further and say that the hon. Member for Richmond
Park and others are right to point out, in relation to the
way people get to the airport, that although no final plans
or designs have been approved for the runway and there is a
series of options, those changes will require us to think
about the public transport needs of those who want to get to
the airport. It is certainly our view that a greater
proportion of people could be encouraged to use public
transport to get to the airport.
The huge investment that is already planned or under way for
the provision of better public transport services will play
its part. The Elizabeth line—Crossrail—will significantly
improve links between Heathrow and central London
destinations. From May 2018, four trains an hour will run
between Paddington and Heathrow airport, replacing the
existing two-train-per-hour Heathrow Connect service. From
December 2019, Elizabeth line trains will run from the
airport directly to central London destinations, including
Bond Street, Liverpool Street and Canary Wharf.
High Speed 2, of course, will connect directly to the airport
via the interchange with the Elizabeth line at Old Oak
Common, providing a new express route to the midlands and the
north from 2026. Transport for London plans to increase
capacity and upgrade trains on the Piccadilly line. Network
Rail is developing plans for a new rail link from the Great
Western main line to Heathrow, which will allow passengers to
travel directly to the airport from Reading and Slough, and a
new southern rail link from Heathrow to south-west London and
the south-west trains network is being developed. My right
hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Transport has
expressed his ambition to accelerate that scheme, and we are
taking that into account as part of the planning process for
the next funding period. There is no doubt that with the
improved services to which I have referred, we will make
available new means by which people can get to and from
Heathrow from a range of destinations around London and well
beyond it.
I emphasise that it is also true that the draft airports
national policy statement recognises that expansion of the
airport would have a range of potential impacts on the
transport networks around it. Improvements would be needed to
make Heathrow’s transport links adequate to support the
increased numbers of people needing to access the expanded
facility there. The proposition in the draft airports NPS for
service access is to require the applicant to develop and
implement a surface access strategy, which would mitigate the
impact of expansion on the transport network.
That is a clear statement that we recognise the arguments of
the hon. Member for Richmond Park about understanding that
surface access is a critical part of the development and that
its success will depend on getting surface access right. I
entirely accept that. That does not seem to be an argument
against expanding the airport, but it is an argument in
favour of doing so in a way that is sustainable and that
links the airport and growth there with the developments that
will take place in and around its vicinity, and beyond.
-
Could you answer the point I made about freight, because so
far your answer has focused specifically on passenger
transport—
-
(in the Chair)
Order. I am sorry, but I have not given any answer to the
hon. Lady.
-
Could the Minister respond on the point about freight?
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Mr Hayes
I will come to the issue of freight, but before I do I want
to make a couple more points on passengers and then say
something about air quality, which the hon. Lady also
mentioned.
As part of the regulatory process, the Civil Aviation
Authority is expected to decide how the costs of any
capacity-related surface access schemes would be treated as
part of the regulatory settlement, including which of the
costs would be recoverable from airport users. That is an
important additional point that was not specifically dealt
with in the hon. Lady’s initial remarks, but she will be
reassured that it is a further element in the package of
proposals that the Government are bringing forward.
I know that many others have views and estimates of what they
believe the surface access costs might be. We do not accept
some of the estimates. Some people have said—others might say
surprisingly, but I will go so far as to say amazingly—that
they might cost £18 billion. We do not accept some of the
more extravagant estimates, because no final plans or designs
have been approved for the runway. While there is a range of
potential options for surface access improvements, it is for
the developers to produce the detailed plan, as I said
earlier, as part of the development consent order, which will
be properly considered through the normal statutory planning
processes. In a sense, we cannot prejudge exactly what the
needs will be, nor what will be necessary to meet them, but
we are clear that, in principle, surface access has to be
part of the process that will now take place.
-
Does the Minister agree that with the known 47% increase in
flights that a third runway will bring, it is actually not
that difficult to predict the expected increase in
passengers, staff movements, freight and air surfacing? Will
he consider in a little more depth whether those calculations
could be done now within reasonable tolerances?
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Mr Hayes
Yes, it is true that we could model some of the anticipated
increase. I accept that, with the caveat that it is dependent
on some of the other things I have already mentioned: the
exact design, the balance between access by car and access by
public transport, the additional investment we are making in
rail, and the whole range of other variables that will affect
the character of demand. It is important as we come to the
end of the consultation process and listen to what people
have to say, and as the application moves forward, that we
get greater clarity about some of that modelling. However, at
this juncture I would not want to be prescriptive about the
character, the shape or, less still, the substance of that. I
take the hon. Lady’s point, which was well made, but there
are still a lot of variables that prohibit us from being too
definitive about some of the modelling at this stage.
I am conscious of time, but I want to say a word about the
Environmental Audit Committee’s report on air quality, to
which the hon. Member for Richmond Park referred. I recognise
the points made about both air quality and surface access
following the publication of the Committee’s most recent
report last week. To contextualise that, the hon. Lady will
know that the Government are considering their air quality
plan. We intend to bring a draft plan forward in the spring,
with a final plan by the end of July in the summer. It will
clearly take into account the recommendations of the Select
Committee. All kinds of possibilities are being considered
and there has been some speculation on what the shape and
character of that air quality plan might be.
Let me be crystal clear, Sir Edward, as I know you would
expect me to be: it is very important that we grasp the
challenge associated with the relationship between air
quality and wellbeing. I discussed exactly that with the
British Lung Foundation this morning. The relationship
between poor air quality and poor health is well established,
and it persuasively argued the case that a range of pulmonary
conditions are exacerbated and worsened by poor air quality.
We take that very seriously indeed. This is not some
high-flown theory about what might happen in centuries’ time;
this is about the health and wellbeing of our children, in
particular, and of older people and ill people who are
especially affected by poor air quality.
We have been clear that as the application for the expansion
of Heathrow proceeds, air quality will be salient in all we
do. We have been clear that it is important that Heathrow
will not proceed unless it meets legal air quality
requirements. The Secretary of State made that clear on 25
October in his statement to the House, and I affirmed it in
this place in an earlier debate on precisely such matters.
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We were not specifically talking about air quality, but since
the Minister has raised it, will the air quality plan include
details of any penalties for Heathrow should the third runway
go ahead and it is then found to breach the air quality
targets that have been set?
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Mr Hayes
The hon. Lady is eager—eagerness is often a feature of new
Members and I congratulate her on it—but she must wait to see
what the plan looks like. Then we will be able to debate it
at great, but not inordinate, length. She will not expect me
to say more about it and what it will include now.
The hon. Lady asked about freight, and it is important to be
clear that freight traffic will play a key part in the
development of Heathrow—I have no doubt of that. It is
absolutely right that a plan anticipating changes in freight
movements is made and is subject to scrutiny and debate. We
will inspect that plan, and the Government will expect the
developers at Heathrow to deliver a cogent, well argued,
proper assessment of the impact of any changes in the volume
or character of freight traffic and how they might affect
congestion, road safety, air quality and all those other
matters that are dear to my heart and of concern to this
Chamber and the whole House.
I see that I have only a moment or two before we conclude. In
summary, I will write to hon. Members about any other matters
raised that I have not dealt with. Let me be crystal clear:
we will proceed with the expansion of Heathrow only on the
basis that it is conducted in a diligent, thorough and
sustainable way; for that is the responsible position taken
by this Government on all such matters.
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