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Expanding Airport Capacity under Constraints in Large Urban Areas: Summary and Conclusions of the Roundtable held on 21-22 February 2013

Author

Listed:
  • David Thompson
  • Stephen Perkins

    (OECD)

  • Kurt van Dender

    (OECD)

Abstract

Expanding airport capacity is difficult in large urban areas. Expansion of existing airports is usually constrained by community agreements on noise and local air pollution and by a shortage of land. Finding sufficient land, at feasible prices, to develop or relocate major airports on green-field sites within a reasonable distance of city centres is often very difficult. Creating land for airports in locations less sensitive to noise and land-use conflicts, for example through offshore or estuarine land reclamation, is expensive and most new sites will require extensive investments in surface transport links to city centres. Furthermore, moving an airport imposes costs on airlines and their users as well as on activities located close to and dependent on proximity to the existing one. In multi-airport regions, options for expansion at one airport will impact the others and airlines, operating in increasingly competitive markets, may respond differently to alternative ways in which the region’s airport capacity might be increased.

Suggested Citation

  • David Thompson & Stephen Perkins & Kurt van Dender, 2013. "Expanding Airport Capacity under Constraints in Large Urban Areas: Summary and Conclusions of the Roundtable held on 21-22 February 2013," International Transport Forum Discussion Papers 2013/24, OECD Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:oec:itfaab:2013/24-en
    DOI: 10.1787/5jz40rtc8jlv-en
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