Daily Mail

How No Deal could put your holiday at risk

- By Jack Doyle Executive Political Editor

‘Aircraft could be grounded’

TENS of thousands of holidaymak­ers could be stopped from travelling to the continent if the UK leaves the EU without a deal, Government papers suggest.

Anyone whose passport has less than six months to run faces being turned away at borders when existing rules become obsolete overnight at the end of next March.

Under current arrangemen­ts, Britons can travel to Europe as long as their passport is valid to the end of their stay. But in the event of a ‘no- deal’ Brexit they would in all likelihood be treated like travellers from non-EU countries.

As a result, any passport without at least six months left before it expired would be invalid for travel. That could mean a glut of applicatio­ns for passport renewals.

One Whitehall source warned there could be chaos at the passport office if it had to process a vast number of new documents in such a short time frame. The source said the Home Office was ‘nowhere near prepared’ and the paper had ‘set alarm bells ringing’ among ministers.

Travellers with dogs and cats will also need to get a rabies test signed off by a vet before they can take their pet abroad, because the current pet passport scheme will also become invalid after the exit date.

The warnings are contained in one of the technical notices on ‘no deal’ which are due to be published by officials tomorrow.

Theresa May has convened a special three-hour Cabinet meeting to discuss preparatio­ns for talks collapsing without agreement.

Ministers will be briefed on Operation Yellowhamm­er, Whitehall’s code name for no-deal contingenc­y planning. Chancellor Philip Hammond is also likely to face demands from his colleagues for more cash from his £3billion no-deal fund to make sure they are ready.

The documents will spark fresh claims from Euroscepti­cs about scaremonge­ring by Downing Street in an attempt to generate support for Mrs May’s Chequers plan.

The papers are likely to set out the possibilit­y of extensive delays at ports and airports. Significan­t focus is on Dover and the prospect of the M20 becoming clogged up with lorries if there are delays at the port.

Last night a senior government source said the technical notice on passports was a ‘worst case scenario’.

Ministers are preparing to take unilateral steps wherever possible to avoid chaos.

The extent of the problems would depend on how the EU responds and whether it takes similar steps. Last night the British aerospace industry warned air travel could grind to a halt because the European Commission has refused to start talks on a ‘back-up’ deal.

ADS, which represents the sector, has written to Brussels warning aircraft could be grounded and accused them of underminin­g safety.

Paul Everitt of the ADS said the UK’s Civil Aviation Authority had had ‘detailed talks’ with the US, Canada and Brazil.

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