The need for and potential site of a second airport in Sydney has been the
topic of debate for governments and communities for some considerable time.
Recent Federal Government decisions to upgrade Bankstown Airport and to delay
the development of a second airport at Badgery’s Creek have renewed
interest in the issue. This Paper looks at the operations of the airports
currently in use in the Sydney basin. It also reviews the arguments concerning
the need for a new second airport and proposed sites.
Since the 1940s the Federal Government has been considering the airport needs
of the Sydney basin, and whether a second airport should be built. In February
1986 the Commonwealth Government announced that Badgery’s Creek had been
selected as the site for Sydney’s second major airport. It contained
over 240 properties which were acquired by the Commonwealth between 1986 and
1991 at a cost of $155 million (page 6).
In September 1997 a draft environmental impact statement on a second airport at
Badgery’s Creek was released, based on an operating level of 245,000
aircraft movements a year, with the number of passengers approaching 30 million
(pages 7-9).
The existing and planned facilities at Sydney Airport are considered adequate
to fulfil its current planned capacity of about 353,000 aircraft movements and
30 million passenger movements per year. As at the end of the financial year
ending June 2000, Sydney Airport handled 23.2 million passenger movements and
290,019 aircraft movements.
The EIS considered a range of alternatives to a second airport, including
upgrading Bankstown Airport and upgrading the capacity of Sydney Airport.
Independent analysis concurred with the EIS that that sufficient evidence was
provided to conclude that none of the identified strategic alternatives to a
second Sydney airport would, in isolation, satisfy the objective of providing
adequate airport capacity to help meet Sydney’s long-term commercial
aviation demands (pages 9-13).
On 13 December 2000 the Federal Government announced its decision on the future
airport needs of Sydney. The Government considered that Sydney Airport was
comfortably handling its growing level of air traffic and concluded that it
would be premature to build a second major airport in the city. Instead, the
Government decided to make Bankstown Airport available as an overflow airport
for Sydney (page 13).
The decision attracted a lot of attention and criticism. No work had been done
to assess and officially inform the public about aircraft noise and other
environmental ramifications of the upgrade of Bankstown Airport and delaying
the construction of a second airport. It was left to the media and media
commentators to interpret how the distribution of aircraft noise in Sydney may
change (pages 14-16).
Whilst the NSW ALP expressed strong opposition to an upgrade of Bankstown
Airport, the NSW Coalition parties noted that regional airline access to Sydney
Airport was guaranteed at reasonable prices (pages 16-17).