Capacity Without Slack
UK commercial aviation demand is visible. The harder question is whether the sector can convert that demand into usable, financed, lower-carbon, operationally reliable capacity before cost, regulation, construction programme scarcity and climate credibility erode the prize.
14 pages · published 7 July 2026 · every figure traces to a named public record
What the record shows.
The CAA record proves demand has returned. It does not prove that the next unit of capacity can be flown, financed, fuelled and defended.
Runway permission is necessary, but construction programme, engines, maintenance capacity and crews decide whether permission becomes reliable flight supply.
Lower-carbon growth has to survive fuel cost, SAF policy, regulated airport financeability and passenger tolerance at the same time.
Hub scarcity, privately financed incremental runway growth and low-cost volume each carry different proof burdens.
Each finding in the briefing traces to a named public record — a notice ID, a filing, a register entry — so you can check any line yourself. The full read, with sources, is in the PDF.
What the public record doesn't settle.
This is not a forecast and it is not advice. It does not claim that any airport expansion is inevitable, that SAF solves aviation emissions, or that demand grows regardless of price. Promoter claims and consultancy context are labelled as such; source-native facts and Lansary synthesis are kept separate.
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