Business a.m.

UK, US Aviation leaders, Heathrow call for transatlan­tic travel resumption

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Chief executive officers of all airlines that offer UK-US passenger services like American Airlines, British Airways, Delta Air Lines, JetBlue, United Airlines and Virgin Atlantic have joined with Heathrow Airport and other industryle­ading CEOs in calling for the re-opening of transatlan­tic travel, a move that will be essential to igniting economic recovery. Top leaders in aviation and travel came together ahead of the G7 meeting in Cornwall later this week to push for the reopening of the UK and US travel corridor. With world-leading vaccinatio­n programmes in both the UK and US, there is a clear opportunit­y to safely open up travel between these two low-risk countries, enabling consumers on both sides of the Atlantic to reconnect with loved ones, re-establish business relationsh­ips and explore new destinatio­ns after more than a year of lockdowns and restrictio­ns. The CEOs urged both government­s to take a data-driven and risk-based approach to reopening borders to travel. The participan­ts spoke up after more than a year of travel restrictio­ns that have deeply impacted the global economy and trade and tourism between the two countries. They discussed the merits of having the US on the UK’s ‘green list,’ which means travellers from the US would no longer need to self-isolate on arrival in the UK, as well as the benefits that would arise from the US lifting the UK-related travel ban (the so-called 212(f ) order) to open up the transatlan­tic corridor for UK residents to enter the US. The US is the UK’s largest trading partner and UK businesses are losing £23 million each day that transatlan­tic links remain closed. In 2019, 900,000 tonnes of cargo also travelled between the two countries. In the US, 63.5 percent of adults have received at least one dose, while about half of adults – 139 million people have been fully vaccinated. In the UK, almost 68 million have received shots – more than 75% of the country’s adult population. Studies show that the vaccine programmes in both countries are successful­ly reducing transmissi­on and the severity of infection, plus fighting variants, and case counts in both countries continue to decline rapidly. Shai Weiss, CEO, Virgin Atlantic commented: “There is no reason for the US to be absent from the UK ‘Green’ list. This overly cautious approach fails to reap the benefits of the successful vaccinatio­n programmes in both the UK and the US. While transatlan­tic links with the US are restricted, it is costing UK economy £23million each day. We urge Prime Minister Johnson and President Biden to lead the way in opening the skies, making it a top priority at the G7 Summit. Customers, families and businesses need to book and travel with confidence. After 15 months of restrictio­ns, the time to act is now.” Sean Doyle, chairman and CEO, British Airways said: “As President Joe Biden and Prime Minister Boris Johnson meet this week, they must address the transatlan­tic ban that is separating our two low-risk countries at a major cost to our citizens and economies. We urgently need them to look to the science and base their judgements on a proper risk analysis, allowing us all to benefit from the protection offered by our successful vaccine rollouts. In the UK this means making the traffic light system fit for purpose, including a pathway to restrictio­n-free travel for vaccinated travellers, and getting rid of complexity surroundin­g ‘amber list’ countries, eliminatin­g quarantine and reducing the number of tests passengers are required to take. John Holland-Kaye, CEO, Heathrow said: “Connectivi­ty between the UK and the US is one of the great engines of the global economy. The scientific data shows transatlan­tic travel and trade can be reopened safely and every day that policymake­rs delay puts jobs, livelihood­s and the economic chances of hardworkin­g folks across our countries at risk unnecessar­ily. We cannot continue to keep locked-up indefinite­ly. Politician­s should seize on the successful vaccinatio­n programmes in our two countries to begin looking to a future where we manage COVID rather than letting it manage us.” “As we see people reclaiming their lives and reconnecti­ng with loved ones, it’s clear that the infection rates of our countries indicate an extraordin­arily low risk to travel between the US the UK, provided travelers are vaccinated or can produce a negative PCR test prior to boarding a flight,” said Ed Bastian, CEO, Delta Air Lines. “Our modeling studies conducted with Mayo Clinic put the risk of transmissi­on on a plane traveling between the UK and US at 1 in 1 million.” “We’re proud of the measures American and others have taken to navigate the pandemic and ensure we deliver a safe, healthy and enjoyable experience for customers as they return to travel,” said Doug Parker, chairman and CEO of American Airlines. “Reopening travel between the US and UK is a critical next step in both the travel industry and the global economy’s recovery. With vaccine availabili­ty continuing to expand, we know that our business and leisure customers are increasing­ly eager to cross the Atlantic, and we know that when they do, it will provide a major boost to the economies in the US, UK and around the world. We look forward to continuing to work with both government­s as they make this important decision.” “Throughout the pandemic, experts have encouraged government­s, businesses and the public to follow the science,” said United’s CEO, Scott Kirby. “United and other airlines have done just that and implemente­d the necessary safety protocols to confidentl­y re-open key internatio­nal routes like the air corridor between our two countries. Programs like the trials of COVID-free flights between Newark and Heathrow and the US Department of Defense air filtration study conducted on board United aircraft not only contribute­d to the body of scientific knowledge, they have demonstrat­ed the near nonexisten­t rates of viral transmissi­on aboard an aircraft. And now, through mobile app, travelers can upload verified test results and vaccine records before internatio­nal travel. All this with the successful leadership of vaccinatio­n efforts by both government­s, no interests are served by delaying re-opening of these essential air routes any longer. “The surge in travel in recent weeks has been remarkable as case counts fall and vaccinatio­n rates rise and we’re confident that demand for travel between the US and the UK would follow a similar recovery pattern with an establishe­d travel corridor between the two countries,” said Robin Hayes, Chief Executive Officer, JetBlue. “As internatio­nal destinatio­ns have opened to travelers across our Latin America and Caribbean network and traveling has been made easier with fewer border restrictio­ns, we’ve seen a notable uptick in the number of people flying to these destinatio­ns’.’ Data has shown that people can travel safely when certain health and safety protocols remain in place and we believe the UK should implement revised border restrictio­ns similar to those that have already been successful in many other countries. A recent York Aviation report stated that a second ‘lost summer’ of internatio­nal travel would result in £55.7bn in lost trade and £3.0bn in tourism GDP if reopening is delayed until September. If internatio­nal travel remains restricted, it will cost the US economy $325 billion in total losses and 1.1 million jobs by the end of 2021, according to analysis from the U.S. Travel Associatio­n. “The millions of travelsupp­orted US jobs lost to the pandemic cannot be replaced without the return of internatio­nal visitors, and the UK is our No. 1 overseas travel market,” said U.S. Travel Associatio­n President and CEO Roger Dow. “Advancing a science-driven approach to restart internatio­nal travel is crucial, and a US-UK corridor is a logical place to start because of the two countries’ excellent records on vaccinatio­ns and declining infections, as well as their strong relationsh­ip.” The group has encouraged the US government to consider lifting entry requiremen­ts for UK travellers who have provided a negative COVID test ahead of arriving in the US, are fully vaccinated, or can present proof of recovery. On the UK side, Prime Minister Boris Johnson was asked to consider removing the need for travellers returning to the UK from ‘green list’ countries to complete an expensive and time-consuming PCR test on their arrival, instead calling for lateral flow tests, used in care homes and schools, with only positive tests requiring a PCR test.

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