
EPA
London City Airport sits in an area near Canary Wharf densely populated with residential pockets as well as tall buildings
Plans to fly larger aircraft from London City Airport are facing opposition from a group of politicians who are concerned about more flights, extra noise and increased emissions.
Its bosses say bigger planes would mean it could increase passenger numbers with fewer flights than with their current, smaller aircraft. They also say the new planes will be less noisy.
But the London Assembly's environment committee is calling for any plans to be halted until "independent and real-world assessments" are carried out.
But in order to fly large aircraft such as the A320neo - an updated version of the Airbus A320 - a more shallow flight approach is needed, according to the airport.
This would mean planes flying over parts of east London 90ft (27m) lower than they currently do, the committee said.

Reuters
The Airbus A320neo (new engine option) is designed for short- to medium-haul flights and can typically carry 140-180 passengers
Signed by the committee's deputy chair Léonie Cooper, the letter said the airport's projected data was "not sufficient to fully understand the noise impact, and the health and quality of life of residents living and working nearby".
"The committee therefore opposes any changes until robust, independent real-world assessments have been undertaken to understand how these changes could affect local communities in practice," the letter said.
The cross-party group also expressed concern that the change might be used to open new routes and therefore increase the overall number of flights.
London City Airport said the proposal would "unlock more destinations and support London's connectivity and economic growth".
A spokesperson said: "Larger capacity, new‑generation aircraft will mean fewer flights and less noise disturbance for local communities when compared to not making this change over the coming years.
"Our priority is to grow our airport and continue to maintain a central role in the regeneration of east London."
The Civil Aviation Authority is due to make a decision on lowering the flight approach into the airport by this autumn.

13 hours ago
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