London Southend Airport owner plans to sell up after Covid losses

Richard Smith/BBC easyJet planes at London Southend AirportRichard Smith/BBC
EasyJet had a permanent base at London Southend Airport before the first Covid-19 lockdown

The owner of London Southend Airport is planning to sell the business.

Esken said it would "explore" disposing of its aviation business, which also includes its logistics provider Star Handling.

Passenger numbers at the Essex terminal dropped 90% during the coronavirus lockdowns.

"Ultimately this will benefit our airline partners, customers, local stakeholders and the region," said an airport spokesman.

'Ambitious growth'

Southend's three main carriers, Ryanair, Wizz Air and easyJet, all pulled out of the airport when the pandemic began.

Passenger numbers fell from 2.15 million in 2019-20 to 147,000 in 2020-21, and for a period there were no passenger flights whatsoever.

The airport announced post-tax losses of £21.5m in the year ending 28 February 2022.

Managers, however, have claimed to be making a comeback, having reopened routes to Faro, Malaga and Palma last year, and announced the resumption of four flights per week to Amsterdam from May 2023.

An airport spokesman added: "Our parent company Esken is exploring a sale of London Southend Airport and initial planning for this has already started.

"Esken will look for the right buyer with the capital to support our new management team and our ambitious growth prospects over the long term."

PA Media London Southend AirportPA Media
Southend Airport expects to host up to four flights per week to Amsterdam this summer

Esken, the British infrastructure company, released an update about its strategic review on Thursday ahead of publishing its account for the last year.

It read: "The board has concluded that it is in the best interests of all stakeholders to secure the long-term potential of these businesses and deliver value for Esken shareholders through a managed disposal process."

The Esken announcement also said the outlook across the UK aviation sector for this summer was "increasingly positive".

It also plans to sell its fuel supply company, Esken Renewables.

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