The third runway at Heathrow Airport
could involve planes taking off from a "ramp" over the M25 motorway,
the transport secretary says.
Chris Grayling said this would be
"cheaper and quicker" than building a tunnel for the M25 under the new
runway and would cause less disruption for drivers during construction.
Theresa May defended the government's plans to expand Heathrow during PMQs.
The prime minister told MPs the scheme could meet air pollution standards.
She was responding to a question from Conservative Tania Mathias, one of the Tory MPs fighting the third runway.

The government's long-awaited backing for a third runway at London
Heathrow has also been attacked by cabinet ministers Boris Johnson and
Justine Greening and sparked the resignation of Conservative MP Zac
Goldsmith.
The decision is also set to face a challenge in the
courts, with the Richmond council leader Lord True telling BBC Radio 4's
Today programme he was "taking legal advice".
The Conservative
peer said Heathrow was "busting air quality legal limits" and was
responsible for "40% of all noise pollution in Europe associated with
airports".
He added: "The fact that the government has already delayed action
for a year results from our reminding them that they hadn't yet
fulfilled things which they're required to do under the existing law."
Lord
True said he would be campaigning for Mr Goldsmith, who will contest
the Richmond Park by-election as an independent with the Conservatives
not putting forward a candidate against him.
Final decision
The
Department for Transport says the new runway will bring economic
benefits to passengers and the wider economy worth up to £61bn and
create as many as 77,000 additional local jobs over the next 14 years.
But
Ms Greening said she was "extremely disappointed", while Mr Johnson
said there were "colossal" problems with the proposal and anticipated it
would be "snarled up" in legal cases.
A public consultation will now be held on the effects of airport
expansion before the government puts the decision to the House of
Commons as part of a National Policy Statement on aviation.
MPs
will then vote on that decision in the winter of 2017-18. It is unlikely
that any new runway capacity would be operational before 2025.
Mr
Grayling added that the construction of the third runway would be
"difficult for people who live close by", and said he was "sorry" Mr
Goldsmith had decided to resign his seat.
But he added: "Ultimately in politics, you have to do what's best for the whole of the United Kingdom."
Responding
to a question about how the runway would bypass the M25, he said many
other airports around the world had built runways over motorways.
"It
is a cheaper and quicker way of doing it. I am, of course, very
concerned to make sure that, as this runway is built, it doesn't cause
massive disruption on the M25, so I think this is a sensible way.
"It
is a very gentle hill up which the planes would take off rather than a
flat surface. It's what happens at very many airports around the world."
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