National Post

Internatio­nal airline travel creeps back with ‘bubble’ corridors

Expect testing, long quarantine­s to become norm

- Angus Whitley

Planes are flying again on a handful of internatio­nal routes, creating a possible path to recovery for a battered industry. But with COVID-19 still spreading, aspiring passengers will have to navigate a patchy network that might include virus tests and weeks- long quarantine.

This month, China and South Korea opened a tightly controlled travel corridor between Seoul and 10 Chinese regions, including Shanghai. Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania lifted travel restrictio­ns between the three Baltic states on May 15. Australia and New Zealand are working to resume flights between the two countries, while the U.K. is also considerin­g creating low- risk air corridors.

The unique accords have emerged as templates for airlines that have been pushed to the brink by the industry’s worst- ever crisis and for countries desperate to salvage some tourism as the world enters a deep recession. But they also highlight the biggest challenge to re-establishi­ng internatio­nal travel: there’s little agreement on what kind of protection­s could limit the risk of spreading COVID-19 across borders.

Lifting quarantine requiremen­ts is fraught with risk

Returning passengers from hot spots such as Iran, New York and Italy have already sparked fresh rounds of infection in countries that had seemingly flattened the curve, including China and Australia. The fact that people with no obvious symptoms can still be contagious only complicate­s matters, and given how easily the virus spreads and the difficulti­es of social distancing during travel, each reopened route could spark new waves of infections.

Airlines and airports worldwide are clamouring for a coordinate­d approach

A United Nations agency that sets the rules for the industry, the Internatio­nal

Civil Aviation Organizati­on, plans to deliver global guidelines by the end of May. They “will have to be flexible, adaptable and potentiall­y reversible,” said Philippe Bertoux, chairman of the COVID-19 Aviation Recovery Task Force at ICAO.

Until it reopened its border to Korea, China had banned almost all foreigners from entering since late March. Before Korean travellers can fly there, they have to jump through a lot of hoops. Conditions of entry include two weeks of screening and a virus test at home, a two- day quarantine in China, and then another blood test.

It doesn’t seem to be putting people off

A representa­tive for the Korea Internatio­nal Trade Associatio­n said it’s taking about 300 calls a day from local companies interested in the fast- track program. Korea Shipbuildi­ng & Offshore Engineerin­g Co., the world’s biggest shipbuilde­r, said it’s among the applicants.

Korean Air Lines Co. sold out its weekly flight from Seoul to the northeast Chinese city of Shenyang — a Boeing Co. 777 with more than 330 seats — and plans to resume flights next month to more destinatio­ns in China, including Shanghai, Beijing and Qingdao. Chinese authoritie­s have recommende­d planes leave at least 25 per cent of seats empty to allow space between passengers.

As of now, there’s no agreed- upon benchmark infection rate or minimum health requiremen­t to determine when a country can safely open its skies or when it must shut down. So individual jurisdicti­ons are going out on their own.

Australia and New Zealand began planning this month for a COVID 19- safe travel zone, though “there is still a lot of work to be done” before travel can resume, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern said on May 5. Separated by a three-hour flight, the two are logical teammates. They’ve also largely suppressed their outbreaks and have begun to exit lockdowns.

“There has to be a lot of trust between the countries and a lot of trust in their data- reporting systems, so it’s not going to work for every country,” said Emma Mcbryde, professor of infectious disease and epidemiolo­gy at James Cook University in Queensland. “You need to be sure that each of the countries has very low, or similar levels of COVID-19.”

Europe is also an obvious candidate to establish regional guidelines for internatio­nal travel. To help countries gradually lift travel restrictio­ns, the European Commission earlier this month released a package of guidelines, including social distancing “where feasible” and wearing face masks in transport hubs.

What happens when passengers arrive is another concern

China and Korea have isolation and testing requiremen­ts for travellers. The U. K. and Spain have said they’ll impose 14- day quarantine­s on most air travellers.

London’s Heathrow Airport is working with the U.K. government on a plan that would allow people flying in from countries with a low incidence of the virus to avoid the controvers­ial quarantine restrictio­ns.

The airline industry says quarantine­s will kill demand. The Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n, which represents almost 300 carriers, found in an April survey that 69 per cent of recent travellers wouldn’t fly if it involved a 14- day quarantine.

Any solution “must give passengers confidence to travel safely and without undue hassle,” IATA Director General and chief executive Alexandre de Juniac said last week. “And it must give government­s confidence that they are protected from importing the virus.”

The risk of catching the coronaviru­s on a plane is low, IATA argues, but on May 5 it recommende­d a suite of steps to protect passengers and crew from infection. The measures include temperatur­e checks at the airport and, as in the European Commission’s guidelines, face masks on the plane. More restrictiv­e proposals include limiting movement inside the cabin, scaling back food and drink services and reducing human interactio­n throughout the journey.

Budget carrier Ryanair Holdings PLC has said it won’t allow passengers to queue for the toilet on its flights.

As it is, the bulk of the world’s aircraft remain grounded and most overseas travel is on hold until the northern hemisphere’s late summer — at the earliest. Australia’s Qantas Airways Ltd. has scrapped long- haul internatio­nal services until the end of July and says further delays are likely. Ryanair has said it might resume as many as 70 per cent of its flights in August.

In the long run, the regional corridors and bilateral cooperatio­n “could be a very good model to see the internatio­nal market opening up,” Qantas chief executive Alan Joyce said.

It could also set precedent for the industry. “If we do have another virus come up, the ability to deal with it, control it and drive that recovery process should be more efficient,” said Calvin Wong, an analyst at Jpmorgan Chase .

BULK OF WORLD’S AIRCRAFT REMAIN GROUNDED.

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