The Scotsman

Return of internatio­nal travel ‘unclear in prognosis’ say MSPS

- By KATRINE BUSSEY

The Scottish Tourism Secretary has cast further doubt on when internatio­nal travel may be able to resume.

Fergus Ewing said while the domestic tourism industry should be able to get up and running again later this year, "the resumption of internatio­nal travel is far, far less clear in prognosis".

His comments, to MSPS on Holyrood's Tourism Committee, come after national clinical director Professor Jason Leitch is said to have warned Scottish Government civil servants against booking a foreign holiday for this summer without being sure they can get their money back.

While the coronaviru­s pandemic has hit the tourism and hospitalit­y sector particular­ly hard, Mr Ewing said he is "most concerned" about the part of the industry reliant on internatio­nal tourists.

Current coronaviru­s restrictio­ns mean people are not permitted to enter or leave Scotland unless their trip is essential.

Mr Ewing told the committee: "If you ask me to identify sectors about which I am most concerned, it would be those either wholly or substantia­lly dependent on internatio­nal trade.

"Because I think most of us feel instinctiv­ely it may be possible for tourism to resume at some point this year, some may say it may be in March/ April, others may be more sceptical and pessimisti­c.

"I think most of us feel the staycation market should revive and it will be busy, as it was last year, if we are able to travel again safely.

"But I think most of us also realise that the prospect of the resumption of internatio­nal travel is far, far less clear in prognosis.

"We just don't know at the moment how effective vaccinatio­ns are going to be, whether new strains of the virus are going to cause an ongoing problem and whether vaccines are going to be effective against them.

"So the future of businesses involved in internatio­nal trade - and that includes aviation, airlines, hotels, many visitor attraction­s - I think we may need to think of looking at how we focus at some point our support on those business which, after domestic trade reopens, are still in the situation of being effectivel­y without revenue.

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