Advancing UK Aerospace, Defence, Security & Space Solutions Worldwide

Aerospace

UK Government funding greener skies

Faster, quieter and greener journeys by air are one step closer today thanks to a further £3.7 million investment in redesigning the UK’s motorways in the sky, the Government has confirmed.

Above: Yesterday, Aviation Minister Robert Courts announced the funding boost from London City Airport, one of the airports to receive a share of the initial funding last year.
Courtesy Department of Transport

The funding will support the Government's programme to modernise the UK’s airspace for the first time since the 1950s, helping the aviation industry build back better from the COVID-19 pandemic and create a resilient, efficient airspace that is fit for the future.

Advertisement
ODU RT

It will support airports to develop new, more efficient flight routes that make use of modern technology, such as performance-based navigation, which will enable aircraft to fly more precise routes.

Today’s £3.7 million in new funding brings the total funding to £9.2 million, after an initial round of investment in March 2021 and is being provided on an exceptional basis while the sector recovers from the impacts of the pandemic.

Yesterday, Aviation Minister Robert Courts announced the funding boost from London City Airport, one of the airports to receive a share of the initial funding last year.

Aviation Minister Robert Courts said: "By redesigning our skies, we are creating a modern UK airspace that is fit for future generations and makes journeys quicker, quieter and greener.

"This £3.7 million funding will support the industry in upgrading our airspace, allowing the aviation sector to continue to grow while we build back greener, cut carbon emissions and deliver on our ambitious plans to reach jet zero."

Mark Swan, Head of the Airspace Change Organising Group (ACOG), said: "The announcement of today’s funding enables the industry to move on confidently to the next stage of modernising the UK’s airspace.

"This programme is a critical national infrastructure project for the UK and will deliver benefits across the country – from increasing efficiencies in the routes aircraft fly to supporting the industry to deliver its net zero targets.

"With airspace not updated since the 1950s, it remains a programme that is long overdue.

"Today’s additional funding maintains momentum behind the programme following its remobilisation and we look forward to our continued engagement with the government, CAA and airspace change sponsors in delivering airspace modernisation for the country."

The airport sponsors of the programme will resume responsibility for funding future stages, as the sector continues its recovery.

Britain’s airspace is made up of a complex network of flight paths that have seen little development since they were designed 70 years ago, despite a surge in demand on our airspace from commercial planes to private aircraft, the military and drones.

In recent years, this has led to increased flight delays, noise and pollution. Without action, our congested airspace could have meant that passengers would have seen 30-minute delays on one in three flights by 2030.

Redesigning our airspace will enable aircraft to fly more direct, precise routes, with faster climbs and a reduced need for holding patterns – cutting up to an approximate 600,000 tonnes of CO2 annually, according to early analysis.

Advertisement
Security & Policing Rectangle

Alongside moving to best-in-class aircraft and more efficient aviation operations, airspace modernisation could help to deliver up to 36% of CO2 savings by 2050.

Plans to modernise the UK’s airspace are just one of a number of measures that will make up the UK’s strategy to deliver net zero aviation by 2050, or jet zero, which is set to be published this year.

Today’s £3.7 million in funding will support airports to continue progressing through the second stage of the airspace change process, which involves developing and evaluating potential designs for changes to our airspace.

In the next stage, airports will launch public consultations on their proposed airspace changes.

Airport Operators Association Chief Executive Karen Dee said: “We welcome today’s announcement by Government of a further £3.7 million towards Airspace Modernisation on top of the £5.5 million in Government investment announced last year. This will give airports some essential support to continue this crucial programme of upgrading the UK’s airspace and deliver quicker, quieter and cleaner journeys.

“The UK’s airspace is our invisible infrastructure in the sky, vital to the UK’s connectivity and to the delivery of government agendas like global Britain. Airspace Modernisation is also essential to support aviation as it aims to build back better, so that a recovery to pre-pandemic passenger levels can be delivered with a reduced impact on the environment We look forward to working with Government and the Airspace Change Organising Group to deliver modernisation and to help achieve aviation’s net zero by 2050 commitment.”

 

 

 

Advertisement
General Atomics LB
Rolls-Royce and Turkish Technic break ground on aero engine maintenance facility

Aerospace

Rolls-Royce and Turkish Technic break ground on aero engine maintenance facility

9 January 2026

Rolls-Royce and Turkish Technic have broken ground on Turkish Technic’s aero engine maintenance facility at Istanbul Airport.

Air passenger and air cargo demand up over 5% in November 2025

Aerospace

Air passenger and air cargo demand up over 5% in November 2025

8 January 2026

International Air Transport Association (IATA) data reveals that global passenger demand was up by 5.7% and air cargo demand up by 5.5%, in November last year.

MTC accelerates strategic vision with non-exec appointments

Aerospace

MTC accelerates strategic vision with non-exec appointments

7 January 2026

The Manufacturing Technology Centre (MTC) has appointed Natascha Engel, Professor Paul Monks CB and Professor Rachel O’Reilly MBE as non-executive directors to its board, strengthening its commitment to deliver the UK’s industrial strategy and drive innovation in advanced manufacturing.

Norton Rose Fulbright expands global aviation offering

Aerospace

Norton Rose Fulbright expands global aviation offering

7 January 2026

Global law firm Norton Rose Fulbright has further strengthened its global aviation practice with the appointment of aviation finance partner Leo Fattorini as its Head of Aircraft Finance, Asia and the Middle East, based in Singapore.

Advertisement
Security & Policing Rectangle
IFS to acquire Softeon

Aerospace Defence Security

IFS to acquire Softeon

6 January 2026

IFS today announced that it has entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Softeon, a provider of cloud-native Warehouse Management, Warehouse Execution and Distributed Order Management solutions.

Luton Airport and University of Beds sign AI partnership

Aerospace

Luton Airport and University of Beds sign AI partnership

6 January 2026

London Luton Airport (LLA) and the University of Bedfordshire have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to launch an innovative artificial intelligence (AI) collaboration.

Advertisement
ODU RT
Advertisement
General Atomics LB