Press Release - 26 April 2005 |
STAND FIRM AND DEMAND EXPANSION TRUTH, SSE TELLS UTTLESFORD
Stop Stansted Expansion (SSE) has called on Uttlesford District Council
(UDC) to fulfil its duty to the community and insist that BAA provides a
full and comprehensive picture of the adverse effects which the expansion of
Stansted Airport would create and of the measures to mitigate them.
The demand was made in the wake of BAA's dismissal of key information
requests made by UDC on the content of the environmental impact assessment
(EIA) which will be essential in deciding any planning application for
expanding the capacity of the existing runway.
Planning law requires BAA to submit an EIA when it applies to go beyond the
permitted capacity of 25 million passengers per annum (mppa). The EIA will
have to identify and assess the main effects which BAA's development would
have on the environment at large and describe the measures envisaged to
avoid, reduce and mitigate adverse effects. A health impact assessment
(HIA) will also be necessary.
BAA has treated UDC's information requests with contempt. On page after
page of its 21-page response, there is repeated refusal to provide the depth
and breadth of information which will fully reveal the true impacts of
expansion. If the council does not stand firm now, SSE made clear, public
confidence in UDC's ability to stand up for local people's interests in
determining expansion applications will be significantly eroded.
BAA's rejection of Uttlesford's request for a Quality of Life Assessment,
for example, on the basis that “the airport boundary is not being extended”
completely disregards the impacts which expanded operations would have far
beyond the perimeter fence. Other numerous examples of downplaying the
significance of increased capacity appear throughout the response document,
notable for its refusal to be transparent and accountable through the
provision of proper measurement and predictive studies into noise, air
pollution, traffic, rail access and other areas covered by the EIA.
“BAA is obviously anxious to keep things as tight and as narrow as possible
to avoid being held responsible for the impacts of expansion or for their
mitigation if mitigation were truly possible for the environmental
catastrophe which is being proposed,” said SSE Chairman Peter Sanders.
“Even before BAA's response to the scoping opinion emerged there were
concerns within the community that the EIA, which will be paid for by BAA,
would have an extremely narrow focus and go no further than the very basic
requirements of planning law. These fears are being justified and it is now
clear that if Uttlesford is to make a full and fair assessment of any
application to go beyond the currently permitted capacity of 25mppa it must
insist on knowing the true picture. This must cover not only the
consequences of the airport's expansion but the consequences of all related
developments generated by that expansion.”
The application for expanded use of the existing runway is currently
expected in late 2005 although the schedule has slipped repeatedly since the
Air Transport White Paper was published in December 2003. The application
for the second runway, not covered by the Scoping Opinion response, is
expected in late Spring 2006, over a year later than originally planned by
BAA.
ENDS
Note to Editors:
Passenger throughput at Stansted Airport is currently in the region of 21
mppa, over four times the number in 1997 when just 5 million passengers
passed through its terminal. The permitted capacity of the existing runway
is 25 mppa which is likely to be reached in 2006, four years earlier than
originally suggested by BAA when it made the application for permission to
increase from 15 to 25 mppa. While the next application is expected to be
for 35 mppa, the runway is capable of handling double the current number of
passengers: 42 mppa. The majority of passengers travel to the airport by
car.
Further information/comment:
Peter Sanders, Chairman, SSE: 01799 520411
Carol Barbone, Campaign Director, SSE: 0777 552 3091
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