The UK government’s latest move that will slash the travel quarantine lockdown if passengers test negative on the fifth day, will provide a much-needed economic boost and is a step towards reviving international travel, says the World Travel & Tourism Council (WTTC).
WTTC says the move, which will come into effect on 15 December, is significant progress to restoring travel, especially for leisure travellers.
However, while many holidaymakers will embrace the reduced quarantine and will be able to afford the test, which will cost between GBP65 and GBP120, WTTC says it won’t be enough to resuscitate meaningful business travel.
For that to take place and to significantly aid the Travel & Tourism sector, which has been battered by widespread and uncoordinated travel restrictions, quarantines need to be reduced even further or completely replaced with a comprehensive and internationally recognised test upon departure.
Until a vaccine is widely available, WTTC says this is the only way to get business travellers moving again, which is so critical to the UK economy.
However, WTTC supports any viable alternatives to damaging quarantines to get travel moving once more, such as the oneworld airline alliance trial with British Airways and American Airlines recently unveiled, which offers free COVID-19 tests to eligible customers on select flights between the UK and the US, as well as other examples we have been seeing around the world.
Gloria Guevara, WTTC president & CEO, said: “Cutting the hugely disruptive 14-day quarantine to just five days with a test, albeit a rather expensive one, will be welcomed throughout the Travel & Tourism sector as real progress.
“However, whilst it may provide the shot in the arm needed to bring about the return of some international leisure travel, it is simply not enough to bring back the economically boosting business travel.
“A single internationally recognised cost-effective test for all departing air passengers should be used to remove crippling quarantines and begin the gradual process to revive international travel, save the sector and bring back millions of jobs around the globe.”
WTTC has been at the forefront of a series of international initiatives to fight for and support the stricken travel and tourism sector since the beginning of the pandemic.
Thousands of businesses have been left in the balance and the jobs of 174 million people employed in the sector globally could be lost if action isn’t taken to restore international travel.