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South-west France airport announces the end of night flights

One of France's largest airports has announced the end of night-time flights after a campaign by local residents against noise pollution which they said made it impossible for them to sleep.

South-west France airport announces the end of night flights
A French airport has announced the end of night flights after a campaign by local residents. Photo by Charly TRIBALLEAU / AFP

The chairman of Toulouse-Blagnac airport – the largest airport in the south-west and among the 10 busiest airports in France – has announced that night flights will be suspended this summer.

Philippe Crébassa announced that there would be no scheduled flights between midnight and 6am, starting this summer.

The decision follows a long-standing campaign from the Collectif contre les nuisances aériennes de l’agglomération toulousaine or CCNAAT (Toulouse area organisation against aviation noise nuisance), which says that during the summer season there are on average 3,740 passenger night flights, which cause serious noise nuisance to local residents.  

The night flight ban does, however, have several important caveats – including permission for flights that have been delayed to take off or land at Toulouse between midnight and 6am. Freight flights are also exempted, which means that the weekly 3am flight from parcel firm Chronopost will continue.

Emergency medical flights or government-related flights will also be permitted to use the airport at night if necessary.

“It’s a step forward, but we’re aware of the limits of these announcements,” said Chantal Beer-Demander of CCNNAT. “For us, the only solution is a real ban, as was the case at Nantes, Paris-Orly or Strasbourg… A controlled closure of airspace, except for health and government flights, with heavy fines for late flights.”

Toulouse is France’s fifth biggest airport, with around 9 million passengers a year. It accounts for around 70 percent of traffic in the entire Occitanie region of southern France.

The city is also the centre of France’s aerospace industry, with Airbus a major employer in the area.

Although France has more than 70 passenger airports, just a handful – including Toulouse – account for the vast majority of air passengers and only 15 airports break even financially.

The rest, mostly small regional airports centred around budget airline flights, rely on government subsidies to stay afloat.

READ ALSO Are France’s regional airports under threat?

Member comments

  1. I am always amazed at how people who decide to live under an airport’s flight path become so upset about the noise pollution. What do you expect if you decide to move there? The airport was there long before them in the vast majority of cases.

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TRAVEL NEWS

No Ryanair, no problem: Alternative travel options to get to south-west France

As budget airline Ryanair announces the end of its Bordeaux services, we take a look at other options for getting to the south-west of France.

No Ryanair, no problem: Alternative travel options to get to south-west France

The Irish budget airline Ryanair has announced that it is pulling out of Bordeaux airport after failing to agree terms with the airport over fees. Services will continue as normal over the summer and the airline will depart in November, a spokesman added.

The news will come as a blow for many people who use the airline, which offers services to around 40 European destinations, including Birmingham, Cork, Dublin, Edinburgh, Manchester and Stansted.

READ ALSO Are France’s loss-making regional airports under threat?

The good news is that Ryanair is not the only airline – or even the only budget airline – to serve Bordeaux. British Airways, easyJet, and Aer Lingus fly to British and Irish destinations from there, while airlines from Aegean Airlines to Vueling fly to destinations across Europe, to north Africa, Turkey, and even to Canada.

But if none of these work, there are any other transport options for people needing to get to the south-west of France.

Planes

The south-west France is something of an airport hub with multiple airport options.

British and Irish passengers could fly instead in and out of La Rochelle, which serves Bristol, Gatwick, Cork, Dublin and Stansted for part of the year.

Limoges airport offers flights to Bristol, East Midlands, Leeds-Bradford, Manchester and Stansted.

Bergerac offers flights to Bristol, Bournemouth, East Midlands, Edinburgh, London, Liverpool, Leeds-Bradford, Southampton, and Stansted airports, while – slightly more distant – Biarritz airport serves London, Edinburgh and Dublin.

The rather larger Toulouse airport – some three hours’ drive from Bordeaux – is a regional airline hub, offering flights to hundreds of destinations. 

Trains

Bordeaux is on France’s TGV rail network. It’s between two hours and six minutes and three-and-a-half hours from the capital, depending on which train you catch.

With London and Paris also a little over two hours apart by Eurostar, rail travel between the UK and southwest France is a genuine possibility – and rail aficionados will tell you it’s a very pleasant way to travel.

READ ALSO What can I take on the Eurostar to and from France?

One problem may be getting from Gare du Nord – where the Eurostar stops – to Gare Montparnasse, on the other side of the Seine, from where the TGV to Bordeaux leaves. The journey between the two is about 30 minutes on the Metro, slightly longer by taxi, depending on the time of day. A taxi ride between the two will cost you in the region of €25.

… and automobiles

Le Shuttle – the new name for Eurotunnel – offers numerous daily services between Folkestone and Calais, which would necessitate a near nine-hour drive from the French port to Bordeaux. But there are worse ways to spend your time than driving through the French countryside…

READ ALSO Is it worth taking a detour to avoid France’s steep autoroute tolls?

Ferries

A more leisurely journey could see you take the ferry from the UK or Ireland to – for example – the Brittany port of Roscoff, and then drive seven hours to Bordeaux. It’s about five hours to Saint-Malo, for UK-based travellers who prefer to take the ferry there.

The Spanish ports of Bilbao or Santander are other possible options from either UK or Irish ports. 

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