Heathrow expects fall in passengers and profits this year because of Iran war
Heathrow Airport anticipates a decline in passenger numbers and profits this year, attributing the expected 1.1% drop in passengers to 83.6 million and a £147 million profit reduction to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. The airport has also been in discussions with the Civil Aviation Authority regarding the costs associated with its proposed third runway.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedHeathrow Airport anticipates a decline in passenger numbers and profits this year, attributing the expected 1.1% drop in passengers to 83.6 million and a £147 million profit reduction to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East. The airport has also been in discussions with the Civil Aviation Authority regarding the costs associated with its proposed third runway. Recent government analysis suggests the economic boost from this expansion would be significantly lower than previously estimated, potentially impacting GDP by only up to 0.05% and carrying a substantial overall economic cost to the UK. Heathrow disputes these findings, arguing the analysis fails to account for crucial trade benefits and private investment. Furthermore, a separate report indicates potential negative health and environmental impacts on local communities from the runway project.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedHeathrow forecasts profits to decline by £147m year on year, and £60m compared to its December forecast.
Government analysis estimates a Heathrow third runway would boost GDP by up to 0.05%, a 90% reduction from previous estimates.
Heathrow expects a 1.1% decline in total passengers to 83.6 million this year due to the Iran war affecting air travel.
Heathrow argues the DfT analysis fails to capture £150bn a year in trade benefits and £33bn in private capital for a third runway.
Expanding Heathrow could have 'major adverse' effects on the health and wellbeing of up to 3 million local residents.