One more runway, over 100,000 more flights per year. That is what Gatwick’s £2.2 billion expansion plan promises. If approved in full and completed by the late 2030s, the airport could grow to handle up to 80 million passengers annually, joining the likes of Heathrow and Charles de Gaulle in the heavyweight league. For some, it’s a no-brainer for Britain’s economy. For others, it’s a betrayal of its climate goals, and the courtroom battle has already begun.

The One-Runway Airport That Outgrew Itself
This month, campaigners from Communities Against Gatwick Noise Emissions (CAGNE) launched a legal challenge against the government’s decision to green-light the project. They argue the environmental costs were underplayed, the air quality modelling flawed, and the voices of local communities brushed aside in favour of investor-friendly headlines.
The Department for Transport declined to comment due to ongoing proceedings. Gatwick, for its part, says it will assess the claim and determine its legal stance in due course.
Gatwick is already Europe’s busiest single-runway airport, with nearly 50 million passengers moving through in 2019. For years, its second strip, the Northern Runway, has been a backup, only used when the main one is closed. The new plan shifts that backup slightly north to bring it into daily operation, unlocking a potential 35% increase in capacity.
To its supporters, this is smart infrastructure. Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said the move will unlock billions in private investment, create thousands of jobs, and offer British families more affordable holiday options. The idea is that more flights mean more competition, which could mean lower fares and better access to underserved destinations.
But underneath the economic case lies a deeper question: more seats for whom, and at what cost?

The Climate Baggage No One Wants to Check
Protestors say the plan clashes with everything the UK has promised on climate. CAGNE argues the runway approval relied too heavily on the government’s “Jet Zero” strategy, which banks on low-emission aircraft, sustainable fuels, and offsetting schemes to square the circle. But those are projections, not guarantees. And as climate campaigners point out, emissions from aviation are among the hardest to cut.
Noise is another sticking point. More flights mean more early mornings, more late-night takeoffs, and more days when the garden sounds like a runway. Residents living under the flight path say they’re already pushed to their limits.
CAGNE’s chair, Sally Pavey, puts it bluntly: “This decision makes no economic or ethical sense. We have to challenge it through the courts.”
Gatwick is not alone in wanting to grow. Luton got expansion approval earlier this year, and the government has reaffirmed its backing of Heathrow’s long-stalled third runway. These decisions are part of a pattern. Put simply, airports are pushing for capacity as the world reopens, even as net-zero targets loom.
The government frames it as a trade-off worth making. More tourists, more trade, more money spent in British shops. But if that growth comes with more traffic, more noise, and more carbon, the balance becomes harder to justify.

So, What’s in It for Travellers?
More flights mean more choice. Families in the South East could get better access to budget airlines or direct routes to places previously requiring a connection. Business travellers might enjoy better scheduling. And if you’re chasing a last-minute deal to Spain or Croatia, a busier Gatwick might mean a cheaper seat.
But it’s not just about what happens in the terminal. It’s about the roads leading to it, the trains serving it, and the air you breathe around it. Expanding an airport is not just a travel story; it’s a community story.

Turning Expansion into Something Smarter
There may be a middle ground here. Smarter scheduling, investment in rail links, and genuine investment in sustainable aviation could soften the blow. Other airports have experimented with curfews, flight caps, and noise-mitigation measures. If Gatwick wants to expand and keep public trust, it will need to prove it’s doing more than just adding takeoff slots.
This isn’t just about planes. It’s about planning. And timing.
But I’ll be watching what comes next. If you care about how Britain flies and where the next runway lands – stay tuned to Travel Radar.
