I got to admit that watching you guys talk to each other and reinforce your own false assumptions is an eye opener. A reminder to myself and other aviation ”propeller heads” tracking the building momentum in new aviation technology about the public perception /knowledge gap.
You need to start with a simply question. In 2029 what will be flying and where will it be going? The answer is a whole new set of technologies and missions are expected to be added to existing general aviation airports that already have no room to expand.
Let’s start with the growing demand for more of today’s usual mix of flight training, companies running charters of people and supply’s , Civic support flights (air ambulance and police utility flights), numerous helicopters missions and Private pilots enjoying the freedom to fly to locations far and near that are not serviced by the airlines. Plus all the usual mix of supporting maintenance and administrative functions.
Then we add in a new set of possibilities created by the new airframes just now being announced. So when a government report like the ASA suggests building a new airport to support “ specially passenger aviation”, utility and new industrial uses, what are they talking about?
I refer you to two posts, the first is on the future of general aviation :
https://pickeringairport.org/unleashing-a-golden-age/
And second in reference to specialty passenger aviation and regional or short haul passenger aviation.
https://pickeringairport.org/planning-canadas-electric-flight-future/
I understand that several of you are in motivated to attack Aviation by your advocacy of a Canadian national High speed rail network. And yes the dawn of electric aviation will make passenger aviation cheaper, faster and zero emissions all with a land footprint of only a fraction of High speed rail. But it doesn’t mean that HSR is dead, just obsolete at a national level. HSR can still be of some value in build up city areas, say london to Toronto. High frequency rail would be a better investment over such a short distance.
A trillion dollar aviation industry is investing tens of billion in short haul electric flight. Don’t fight it, welcome it, its zero emissions carbon footprint, and the need for new aviation infrastructure to support it. Like building Pickering Airport.
Pearson will remain the preserve of large long haul aviation and the ultra rich globe trotting jet owners, Pickering is for everyone else.