London City Airport, the jewel in the crown of the capital’s aviation infrastructure, is under siege. Documents obtained by this newspaper reveal a secretive push to accommodate long-haul jets, a move that critics say threatens the very soul of London’s airspace. The airport, known for its short runways and tight noise restrictions, has been the quiet workhorse for bankers and politicians. But behind closed doors, a plan to expand its terminal and extend its runway to handle larger aircraft has been gathering momentum.
Sources confirm that the airport’s management has been in talks with major airlines including British Airways and Emirates, dangling the prospect of direct flights to New York, Dubai and Hong Kong. The expansion would require a relaxation of the strict night flying ban and a doubling of passenger capacity. But local councils, environmental groups and even some lawmakers are pushing back hard.
“This is a power grab by the aviation lobby,” says a senior council source who spoke on condition of anonymity. “They want to turn a convenient business hub into a noisy, polluted mega-airport. London’s sovereignty over its own skies is at stake.”
The airport’s chief executive insists the expansion is necessary to stay competitive. “Other European cities like Frankfurt and Amsterdam are eating our lunch,” he said in a leaked internal memo. “If we don’t adapt, we’ll become a regional player.” But his optimism is not shared by regulators. The Civil Aviation Authority is reportedly concerned about the impact on safety and air traffic control. And the London Assembly has launched an inquiry into the airport’s plans.
What makes this story especially pungent is the money trail. The airport is owned by a consortium of Canadian pension funds and sovereign wealth vehicles. Their appetite for high returns is clashing with public interest. “These are faceless institutions,” says a whistleblower inside the airport’s regulatory team. “They don’t care about noise complaints or carbon emissions. They only care about the bottom line.”
Local residents have already formed a campaign group, ‘Stop City Expansion’, which is rallying support from environmentalists and politicians. “This is about more than just a few more flights,” says its chair, a former transport planner. “It’s about whether we let private money dictate the future of our city.”
The Department for Transport has so far remained silent, but insiders suggest it is watching closely. The airport’s expansion would need a new planning application and a change to the Airports Act. Both would require ministerial approval, which could be politically toxic for a government already struggling with its green credentials.
One thing is clear: the quiet, efficient airport that has been London’s best-kept secret is about to become a battleground. The documents show that the expansion plan includes a new two-storey terminal, an extended pier and a road link to the nearby Docklands Light Railway. The cost is estimated at £500 million. But the hidden cost may be far higher: the erosion of London’s control over its own airspace.
This is not just a planning dispute. It is a fight over sovereignty. And as the noise grows louder, the question is whether the suits in the boardroom or the people of London will win.








