Index  ›  business  ›  City PM
business · City PM ↗

London City Airport faces opposition over bigger planes plan

City PM Published Jun 8, 2026 Reviewed Jun 30, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
The Airbus A320neo will be up to four decibels noisier than some of the current alternative planes which use the airport.
4 decibels · noise
London Assembly’s environment committee, environment committee
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The annual passenger number is planned to reach nine million by 2031.
9 million · passengers
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Around 3.5 million people used City Airport last year.
about 3.5 million · passengers
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Consultation documents suggest that planes will be flying 90 feet lower over City Hall.
90 feet · flight altitude
London Assembly’s environment committee
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
City Airport received government backing in 2024 to boost passenger capacity.
2024 · government backing
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
City Airport was refused consent to extend Saturday flight hours to 6:30pm from 12:30pm.
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The flightpath difference would be about 27 metres over large parts of the east of the capital.
about 27 metres · flightpath difference
London Assembly’s environment committee
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
A decision on the flightpath proposal from the Civil Aviation Authority is due around the autumn.
Civil Aviation Authority
View source ↗

Opposition to plans to allow bigger jets to use City Airport is taking off among London politicians who work right under the flightpath into the Docklands hub.

The London Assembly’s environment committee has raised questions over aircraft such as the Airbus A320neo being used to boost capacity at the capital’s smallest and most central aviation strip.

It has written to the airport’s chief executive, Andy Cliffe, drawing attention to “potential noise impacts”.  It said the Airbus A320neo “will be up to four decibels noisier than some of the current alternative planes which use the airport”.

City Airport has already won out over local opposition to receive government backing in 2024 to boost passenger capacity.

Having been refused consent to extend Saturday flight hours to 6:30pm from 12:30pm, one way to expand includes using larger planes, to take the annual passenger number to nine million by 2031. Around 3.5m people used it last year.

But that would mean altering the flightpath into City, and lower runway approaches. The difference would be about 27 metres over large parts of the east of the capital.

London’s local government is now based at the Royal Docks in the E16 postcode, where London Mayor Sadiq Khan moved it to save costs. Its original bespoke headquarters by Tower Bridge, designed by Norman Foster, proved expensive to run and was running  short of space.

The committee’s letter said: “Depending on approach paths, the London Assembly itself already experiences noticeable levels of disturbance from planes. Consultation documents suggest that planes will be flying 90 feet lower over City Hall.”

London City Airport has said that its expansion plans would include more destinations and “support London’s connectivity and economic growth”.

A decision on the flightpath proposal from the Civil Aviation Authority is due around the autumn.

In the meantime, new routes have already been unveiled. BA’s Cityflyer brand now serves Toulon in Provence, giving east London a direct link with the French Riviera. 

This article was originally published by City PM ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error