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The boss of easyJet today urged the government to ‘take responsibility’ and give airline operators and customers an update on its plans for the easing of travel restrictions.
CEO Johan Lundgren said the low-cost carrier was ready to fly passengers on their summer holidays but remained in limbo without further clarification on what travel corridors will be opened up in May.
Mr Lundgren has also called on Ministers to put popular destinations such as Spain, Portugal and Greece in the lowest risk category when foreign holidays resume.
But the travel chief warned of chaos at airports if ministers fail to boost border resources in time for the re-start of foreign holidays this summer.
This comes as the UK’s largest travel agent Hays Travel reported its busiest day since the Covid pandemic began 15 months ago.
The boost in bookings this week came after cruise operators including P&O, Cunard and Disney announced their schedules for ‘seacations’ around Britain from May.
CEO Johan Lundgren said the low-cost carrier was ready to fly passengers on their summer holidays
Easyjet is using new research to declare that much of Europe should be declared ‘green’, in hopes that restrictions will be eased as planned on May 17.
Mr Lundgren told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘We have always set out that we were going to be ready when we were allowed to start flying again, which means that we have basically kept the fleet in what we call flight-ready conditions.
‘But clearly we now need to get some clarity on this.
‘We need to know what countries are going to go in what categories – the green amber red, framework – and we need to know when that can start to happen, so the clock is ticking.
‘We urge the government to come out and communicate this.’
He said easyJet was still operating, but stood ready to ‘ramp up’ its flights.
‘We are flying today – in a much smaller volume than we would expect – but there is an ongoing operation today, and we are able to ramp that up very quickly.
‘But of course it’s not just us, it’s consumers, customers that need clarity about if they can make the booking for their summer, go on holiday, go and see family members that they haven’t seen for over a year.’
The CEO also said easyJet had seen stronger demand for bookings in September, October and November as passengers hold off going on holiday in the summer because it is still not clear where they can travel.
The low-cost airline echoed the British holiday group Jet2 in saying that bookings for later in the year were encouraging as holidaymakers bet that vaccine rollouts will have curbed the pandemic by then.
He added: ‘Summer bookings have definitely been delayed compared to normal.
‘We are seeing relatively strong numbers coming into September, October, November but still there’s a lot of people who are waiting for the government to come out – where will the countries be in terms of the categories and when can we start to go on make the trip.
‘But definitely people are looking more for the autumn.’
But he warned ministers needed to boost border resources in time for the re-start of foreign holidays.
He said: ‘I think that they [border force officers] need to have the resources to do their jobs.
‘If the government comes out with restrictions when it comes to the work that they need to do to check every single passenger, that’s fine, but they need to make sure that they actually have the capacity and the resources to do that.
‘I think it’s important the UK Government recognise … they have a responsibility to make this work, otherwise it’s not a re-opening.’
This comes after the boss of Heathrow Airport revealed passport control sometimes has only two out of two dozen desks manned.
The boss of easyJet today urged the government to ‘take responsibility’ and give airline operators and customers an update on its plans for the easing of travel restrictions
And passengers have been forced to wait on board planes until queues of up to seven hours have dissipated.
With electronic passport gates not set to fully re-open until autumn due to the need to manually check passengers’ Covid paperwork, travel industry chiefs said Home Secretary Priti Patel must boost border guard numbers within weeks.
Failure to do so would also hit the post-pandemic economic recovery, they warned. The earliest date international travel can resume is May 17.
Heathrow boss John Holland-Kaye said he has written to Miss Patel’s officials several times but that no action has been taken.
He told the Daily Mail: ‘It really would be a national embarrassment for the Government to have their lack of organisation of immigration grind the UK’s biggest port to a halt.’
British Airways boss Sean Doyle said: ‘We are urgently seeking reassurance from Border Force that they are committing the appropriate levels of resource and using contactless technology, which includes opening the e-gates to ensure frictionless travel.’
Steve Heapy, chief executive of package holiday giant Jet2, added: ‘We have to press the Government to make sure there is reassurance Border Force will be operating as normally as possible. We will be operating normally so why wouldn’t Border Force?’
Overseas leisure travel is expected to be permitted for people in England from May 17 as part of the next easing of coronavirus restrictions.
A risk-based traffic light system will be implemented, with different quarantine and testing requirements for countries on green, amber and red lists.
People returning from green destinations will not need to self-isolate and will only be asked to take one post-arrival test.
EasyJet commissioned research by leading epidemiologists Dr Jeffrey Townsend and Dr Alison Galvan from the Yale School of Public Health in the US.
The analysis, based on data from April 12, found that opening UK borders to travellers from much of Europe would increase hospital admissions by less than 4%.
If Spain – the most popular overseas destination for UK holidaymakers – was on the green list, only an additional four people per week would require hospital treatment due to coronavirus, the study found.
The researchers also claimed the 10-day quarantine period for people returning from amber countries is longer than necessary.
The travel lists are expected to be published next week.
A Home Office Spokesperson said: ‘We are in a global health pandemic, and people should not be travelling unless absolutely necessary.
‘Queues and wait times will be longer if passengers have not completed the necessary requirements to enter the UK. Airlines are responsible for making sure that their passengers have completed all the necessary requirements, and airports have a crucial responsibility for ensuring travellers can social distance at passport control.
‘To protect the British public and the UK vaccine rollout from new variants of concern, Border Force is checking that every passenger has complied with current health measures when arriving at the border. ‘
Brits could safely travel to most of Europe WITHOUT quarantine or even tests in some cases because the country’s infection rate is so low and vaccinations so high, easyJet-commissioned study claims
By Sam Blanchard Deputy Health Editor for MailOnline
Brits could travel safely to most parts of Europe without needing to quarantine with infections at the levels they are now, according to an easyJet-commissioned study by Yale University in the US.
May 17 will be the day the Government decides where people can go on holiday this summer and researchers have suggested one or two-week quarantine policies are too harsh for most destinations.
Because the UK’s infection rate is so low there would likely be no benefit for travellers quarantining when they arrive, as long as they were tested instead.
Quarantine is more likely to be needed for returning travellers and those visiting the UK, the researchers said, but up to five days would likely suffice for most places – again if people are tested before and after they fly.
easyJet has seized on the research to call for open borders this summer as it hopes to get passengers in the air after a devastating year for the airline industry. Its CEO Johan Lundgren claimed ‘it is safe to put much of Europe on the green list’.
The Yale study, commissioned by easyJet, suggested safe quarantine periods for different country-pairs, with travellers from the UK not required to quarantine anywhere but Portugal and Turkey, while people coming into Britain from other nations (except Portugal and Finland) should self-isolate for between two and five days. (In the graphic, the suggested quarantine period for people travelling from the UK is shown as a number beside the destination country in the first column, below the ‘UK’ header) Turkey has a high quarantine period because visitors stay there for an unusually long time and there are a lot of travellers relative to population, the researchers said
People travelling or returning into the UK should quarantine because most countries have higher infection rates than Britain does. The countries shaded in darker purple should have longer quarantines, according to the study, with the number of days ranging from two to five
easyJet, which commissioned the research, has seized its results to call for open borders this summer as it hopes to get passengers in the air after a devastating year for the airline industry
The Yale study suggested that the number of people being hospitalised with Covid may only rise by six per day even if international travel opens up en masse. The current rate is at 144 new patients per day.
It said: ‘Our analysis demonstrates that for the vast majority of origin-destination country pairs, there are combinations of short-duration quarantine and testing that are as effective as border closure.
‘Furthermore, for most origin-destination country pairs, travel with testing and no quarantine will reduce imminent in-country transmission more than would border closure.
‘We find that the duration of quarantine is predominantly influenced by country prevalence and quantity of travel.
‘With higher prevalence in the origin country compared to the destination country, the minimum duration of quarantine increases from zero to beyond fourteen days, at which point border closure would likely be practical.’
According to the paper, which is based on infection rates in April and assumes countries have similar levels of vaccinated people, Brits could travel to most countries without needing to quarantine, including Italy, Greece, Finland, Norway, Germany, Switzerland, Austria, Belgium, Netherlands, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Poland and Hungary.
It suggests that a two-day quarantine would be a good idea in Portugal, and a nine-day one in Turkey – Turkey is an outlier because far more people travel in than out, the researchers said, so it was necessary to prevent importing cases.
The reasons that quarantine could be shorter than previously, the experts said, was that in most situations there was a low risk of a traveller being infected and, if they came from a riskier country than the one they were going to, testing before and after the flight would weed out almost all of the infections.
In countries with devastating outbreaks it might still be the best move to put in border controls, they said, but most of Europe has the virus under control.
easyJet’s Mr Lundgren urged the Government to put popular destinations such as Spain, Portugal and Greece in the lowest risk category when foreign holidays resume.
Overseas leisure travel is expected to be permitted for people in England from May 17 as part of the next easing of coronavirus restrictions.
A risk-based traffic light system will be implemented, with different quarantine and testing requirements for countries on green, amber and red lists.
People returning from green destinations will not need to self-isolate and will only be asked to take one post-arrival test.
The analysis, based on data from April 12, found that opening UK borders to travellers from much of Europe would increase hospital admissions by less than 4 per cent.
If Spain – the most popular overseas destination for UK holidaymakers – was on the green list, only an additional four people per week would require hospital treatment due to coronavirus, the study found.
The researchers also claimed the 10-day quarantine period for people returning from amber countries is longer than necessary.
The travel lists are expected to be published next week.
In a speech to a virtual meeting of the Aviation Club, Mr Lundgren said ‘it is safe to put much of Europe on the green list’, as ‘the impact of travel on hospitalisations is minimal’.
Eliminating coronavirus is ‘not viable for the UK’, he told the audience of aviation industry leaders, adding: ‘We need to learn how to operate with it.’
Mr Lundgren went on: ‘The success of the UK vaccine rollout has broken the link between cases and hospitalisation. It is the same success that allows for the domestic reopening.
‘And as we get into May and June we expect the situation to improve because of the progress of the vaccination programmes.
‘So, we have demonstrated through the scientific analysis it is safe for much of Europe to be categorised as green.’
Dr Townsend said: ‘Travel quarantines have been a cornerstone of efforts to prevent infectious disease prevention since the 14th century.
‘We’ve determined that appropriate, shorter quarantines and judicious testing can facilitate travel, in cases where they are needed to prevent unsafe levels of transmission.’
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