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Bristol International Airport (BIA) Master Plan

Picture of plane and link to Bristol International Airport (BIA) website and Master Plan page

The Bristol International Airport (BIA) Master Plan looks at the future development of the airport between now and 2030.

It outlines proposals to increase the annual passenger capacity of the airport from its current 6 million up to 9 million by 2015.

This would mean increased use of the airport and the plan examines the environmental, economic and social impacts of this planned growth.

The plan also looks at future land use and the 12.5 million annual passengers expected to use the airport by 2030.

The Master Plan is not a statutory planning document and not a planning application.

Instead, it is a framework produced by Bristol International Airport (BIA) to identify the type and location of future developments before individual planning applications are formally submitted.

It provides a basis for ensuring measures to address the key issues are properly considered, clearly set out and taken forward transparently.

As such, it is intended to inform the planning process and provide a mechanism for local communities to engage with the airport on its future development.

It follows the requirements of the Government's The Future of Air Transport White Paper 2003 and identifies planned developments up to 2015 and indicative proposals for expansion from 2016 until 2030.

A draft plan underwent a public consultation in November 2005 after which Bristol International Airport (BIA) reviewed the comments received publishing a final version in November 2006.

This final Master Plan was submitted to us for our formal consideration as a non-statutory planning document and also underwent a further public consultation period which ran until 22 December 2006.

More than 4000 comments were received but due to this number of responses we are unable to reply individually to everybody who has written to us.

This volume has also caused delays in displaying these responses on our website.

We apologise for any inconvenience these issues may have caused.

So far, the plan has been considered at all four of our Area Committees, Strategic Planning and Economic Development Policy and Scrutiny (SPED) Panel, Planning and Regulatory (P&R) Committee and two meetings with parish councils.

The committees and panel have heard speeches from members of the public and representatives of various organisations.

The Planning and Regulatory (P&R) Committee considered the Master Plan at a special meeting on 18 January 2007.

It examined it against key national and local policies relating to aviation as well how it related to The Future of Air Transport White Paper 2003 in the light of the Stern Review and the Eddington Transport Study.

It recommended to Full Council that the Master Plan be noted and Bristol International Airport (BIA) advised of its significant concerns.

The Master Plan was noted by Full Council on 20 February 2007 with Bristol International Airport (BIA) advised of our significant concerns regarding the following:

  • The absence of a viable and sustainable surface access strategy evidenced by the anticipated growth in private vehicle movements on local roads, proposed growth in on-site car parking spaces and proposed expansion outside the original airport perimeter and the lack of sufficient compensatory subsidised public transport services
  • The need for independent environmental and biodiversity impact assessment prior to any new development being authorised to answer the anticipated growth in noise and pollution issues arising from aircraft and motor cars and also light pollution and water run-off from existing and planned hard surfaces together with an assessment of potential solutions
  • The need to identify committed funding for works to overcome the above issues ahead of any new expansion of airport services, including Regional Assembly, Government and private funding allocations
  • The need for an independent assessment into the economic cost and benefit impact on local and regional businesses as a result of the proposed retail expansion, on-site hotel and monopolised car parking and taxi services
  • The need to consider any other detailed issues raised through the council's internal and public consultation processes and officers' conclusions
  • We call for full consideration of the Stern Report relating to climate change effects of an expanded airport. We particularly note the apparent contradiction of expanding Bristol Airport while calling for reductions from Bristol industry in order to attain government targets within our Kyoto Treaty obligations and as outlined in the regional economic strategy of the South West Regional Authority.

We understand planning applications will start to be submitted before Easter 2007.

In the meantime with our consultants, we will continue to work on the detailed issues raised through the consultation process and pursue its concerns with Bristol International Airport (BIA) representatives.

The following consultants' reports have been produced for us:

To view the final plan download our Bristol International Airport (BIA) Master Plan 2006 to 2030 document.

Alternatively, hard copies are also available from Somerset House in Weston-super-Mare or at any of our libraries.

The full document and its accompanying summary report and supporting documents are also available from the Bristol International Airport website.

Details of submitted comments are available through our Search applications facility under reference 06/P/2701/MP contained within our online BIA Master Plan case file.