Taranaki Daily News

PM looks at future of travel ‘beyond bubbles’

- Siobhan Downes

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has hinted at the use of vaccine passports in fully reopening New Zealand to internatio­nal travel.

In a pre-Budget speech at an event put on by business advocacy group Business NZ and Fujitsu, Ardern said the Government’s goal at this stage of the Covid-19 response was to move to ‘‘reconnecti­ng our people to the world’’.

She touched on what this could look like ‘‘beyond the bubbles’’, as the vaccine rollout ramps up.

‘‘The first question we’re asking ourselves . . . do we need to have completed our vaccine rollout in order to open our borders beyond the bubble arrangemen­ts we have?

‘‘Will people who have been vaccinated in other countries be able to come in even if we haven’t finished our own rollout?’’

Ardern said the answer was ‘‘possibly’’, but there were two things that would need to be considered.

The first was how effective vaccines are in preventing transmissi­on of Covid-19. Early evidence was promising, Ardern said.

The second was having the flexibilit­y to respond to any new variants of the disease that could pose a risk to New Zealand’s immunity.

‘‘As work continues internatio­nally on vaccine passports, New Zealand will remain actively involved in those discussion­s, whilst also considerin­g other tools for managing and monitoring risk at the border,’’ Ardern said.

The prime minister said New Zealand was currently at ‘‘phase two’’ of its reopening plan, which was a ‘‘holding pattern’’ until New Zealanders were vaccinated.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand