A change to London Luton Airport’s arrival flightpaths is on track for implementation on 24 February 2022.
The change comprises a new holding area near the A1-A14 junction at circa 9,000ft over Grafham Water, and changed flightpaths for 70% of the airport’s arrivals. There are minimal changes from today’s flight paths below 5,000ft, but a greater dispersion of flights above 5,000ft. The holding stack will only be used during the busiest periods or if aircraft are prevented from landing immediately.
It will simplify and modernise the arrival routes for flights into the UK’s fifth busiest airport and separate them from Stansted’s. Given the growth at both airports in recent years, separate arrival routes and a dedicated hold for each airport will ensure continued safety and help reduce delay. It will end the current situation where a delay at either airport can also mean a delay for the other as aircraft queue in the same hold.
The Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) approved the airspace change in November 2021 following an extensive public consultation that ran from October 2020 to February 2021.
For more details on this airspace change, please check the CAA portal.
* Please note, while the consultation has been known as London Luton Airport Arrivals, on the CAA website the proposal is referred to by its technical name, ‘Swanwick Airspace Improvement Programme – Airspace Deployment 6’.
About London Luton Airport:
London Luton Airport (LLA) is one of the UK’s busiest airports despite Covid-19, carrying 58 million passengers in the past five years.
The airport is operated by a consortium of which the majority shareholder is AENA, the world’s largest airport operator, and AMP Capital, a specialist global investment manager. Airlines include easyJet, Wizz Air, Ryanair, Tui, Blue Air, FlyOne, Sun Express and El Al.
LLA was the first UK airport to receive the Airport Health Accreditation from Airports Council International (ACI) for health and hygiene measures introduced during the pandemic.
Passengers travelling by rail can reach the airport via a half-hourly express rail service which operates between London and Luton Airport Parkway. In addition, work is nearly complete on a £225 million light rail system linking the airport with Luton Airport Parkway station. The project is being delivered by the airport owners, Luton Rising – a company owned by Luton Council.
LLA is awaiting final approval to raise its annual passenger cap by 1 million, to 19 million. It will not require any physical changes or new construction at the airport and will prepare the airport to support the recovery of the local and national economy as demand for travel returns.
Contact Details:London Luton Airport Press Office 01582 395333
pressoffice@ltn.aero
NATS Press Office - 01489 615945
press.office@nats.co.uk
URL: https://mediahub.london-luton.co.uk/news/17022022/airspace-change-on-schedule-for-implementation
d6bwaGwPM6SQ1A5MxpCaSUnkB7koJUVRRKl6J2pMuZry7FHXFn6gXD823QBPmLJObdvtzlP9Iwcba8a2gOx2c3DmAEEigvUMWTHNrOWFOkt4xB99QtqOVwomvPJIg2ZPjGQp43WzZO8fGhYDGStSGggrwNl3DEx7LoeQJkJYKkQN26iafqbavSg3QJI0WzEpSkPGor8XEr6c2WSRu861Xl8Ubul2A3eb2ER93qiH2PNl6nPWjlHTvSj3zjWtsh8Pq2OV8ZblnslJrlVBSDJAZ