The Mail on Sunday

Vaccine passports will be ‘bridge to freedom’

- By Glen Owen and Dan Hodges

MINISTERS are planning to use vaccine passports as a short-term ‘bridge to freedom’ before full herd immunity is achieved in the autumn, The Mail on Sunday understand­s.

Under the plans, all Covid-related restrictio­ns would be relaxed as planned under Boris Johnson’s roadmap on June 21 – but with the passports allowing the return of mass public gatherings in the summer.

This would include the return of capacity crowds for the start of the Premier League season in August.

The ‘Covid status certificat­es’, which would show whether the bearer had recently tested negative for the disease or had antibodies either through a vaccinatio­n or past infection, would be discontinu­ed when a large enough proportion of the community has immunity to coronaviru­s to halt its spread.

One report last week argued that this herd immunity had already been reached, but cautious Government projection­s currently put that point at the end of October.

The use of the passports is likely to be restricted to public gatherings such as sport

‘The uncertaint­y is over winter, but the data is looking good’

ing events or theatre production­s, as the logisitics of using them for pubs and restaurant­s are proving to be formidable.

As one Cabinet Minister says: ‘There may be some benefits. But when you look at the practicali­ties of implementi­ng it, and the actual utility of implementi­ng the system, it just isn’t worth it.’

Under the Prime Minister’s roadmap, larger outdoor sports venues would be allowed to operate at up to 25 per cent capacity from May 17, with a maximum of 10,000 spectators, while Wembley Stadium will only have a maximum of 50 per cent capacity for the latter stages of the Euro 2020 matches in July. But passports could open the way for full-capacity events.

The Minister said: ‘It may be the choice we’re looking at is the opening day of the Premiershi­p with 20,000 to 30,000 supporters without Covid passports, or starting the season with the passports or some other system with 60,000.

‘It’s obviously still a bit of a moveable feast, but on the current data we think we’ll reach herd immunity some time in October. So the question is, what can we do to manage things like major events in the meantime?’

A senior Government source said: ‘It is impossible to know for sure, because there are so many moving parts in this pandemic. The uncertaint­y is over winter and the potential for a resurgence, but the data is looking good at the moment.’

Modelling by University College London last week suggested the proportion of the population with protection against the coronaviru­s had hit 73.4 per cent. The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s has stated that 75 per cent need to be vaccinated for the UK to achieve herd immunity.

However, Health Secretary Matt Hancock – keen not to slow the Government’s vaccine rollout – played down the data, saying scientists had told him the threshold had not yet been reached.

More than 40 Tory MPs have opposed the idea, meaning Mr Johnson could struggle to get the plan through Parliament. Ministers have held talks with Israeli officials over importing the technology for its Green Pass scheme, which lets those who have been vaccinated or had Covid enter places such as concert venues and gyms.

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