In a development that has sent shockwaves through the hallowed halls of local government and the snug, gin-scented living rooms of East London, City Airport has announced plans to accommodate larger jets. Yes, the same airport that makes you feel like you’re landing in a postage stamp now wants to play host to transatlantic behemoths. Because nothing says “urban convenience” like a 747 lumbering over the Isle of Dogs at 6am.
Residents, MPs, and anyone with a functioning eardrum have mobilised faster than you can say “third runway at Heathrow”. The opposition is fierce, the rhetoric is thick, and the NIMBYs are out in force, brandishing petitions like pitchforks. But let’s be honest: who can blame them? The prospect of larger planes means more noise, more pollution, and more of that delightful smell of aviation fuel wafting through your morning croissant.
Local MP, the Right Honourable Windbag of Canary Wharf, has declared the plans “an affront to the democratic process” while simultaneously posing for photos in front of a sleek corporate jet. The residents, for their part, have formed a group called “No Big Planes Over Our Prams” which holds meetings in a community centre that sounds suspiciously like it’s under a flight path.
City Airport’s PR machine, meanwhile, has swung into action with all the subtlety of a brick through a greenhouse. They claim the expansion will create jobs, boost the economy, and allow more people to fly directly to their second homes in the south of France. Because nothing says “green recovery” like more private jets and carbon offsets that are probably just a bloke in a shed planting trees made of fibreglass.
But let’s step back and examine the absurdity of the situation. Here we have an airport that prides itself on speed and convenience, essentially saying, “We want to be more inconvenient for everyone else.” Larger jets require longer runways, more ground handling, and a lot more noise. And yet, the business class warriors, those glorious souls who treat air travel as a competitive sport, are no doubt rubbing their hands together at the thought of a non-stop to New York from a mere five miles from the City.
The irony is that this battle is a microcosm of modern Britain: a fight between progress and preservation, between the concrete dreamers and the bed-socked objectors. But in this case, the objectors have a point. London is already drowning in noise. The air is thick with the growl of traffic and the hum of leaf blowers. For the love of all that is holy, do we really need jumbo jets joining the chorus?
I consulted my own personal oracle, a half-empty bottle of Gordon’s and a stack of cancelled boarding passes, and it told me this: the real issue is not the planes but the people. The business elite who think the world is their oyster bar and the rest of us are just the shucked shells. But let them have their larger jets. Soon enough, the noise will be so unbearable that the only escape will be to fly away on one of those very planes. It’s the perfect trap.
In the meantime, I shall raise a glass to the brave souls of Tower Hamlets. May their petitions be long, their objections legally binding, and their nights mercifully quiet. And to City Airport: if you insist on pursuing this folly, at least have the decency to invest in some proper soundproofing for the locals. Or better yet, a free gin bar for those of us who have to listen to your excuses.
This is Biff Thistlethwaite, signing off. I’m off to find a quiet spot away from flight paths, which in London is about as easy as finding a politician without a mortgage on a duplex in the sky.








