Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Easing lifts hope for EU travel

Tourism return seen as integral to post-pandemic recovery

- UROOBA JAMAL

SWANSEA, Wales — When Sierra Schade booked a trip from Atlanta to Greece, she hoped more European countries would follow Greece’s lead and open to U.S. travelers.

She’s now been able to add Italy and France to the itinerary for her trip next month after the 27-nation European Union recommende­d last week that restrictio­ns be lifted for American tourists.

As pandemic restrictio­ns start to ease, travelers and the businesses in Europe that rely on them are eager for a return to something resembling normal.

In 2019, before the pandemic, tourism and related activities accounted for 10% of the EU’s gross domestic product, meaning the return of internatio­nal travel is key

to economic recovery, particular­ly for countries like Greece and Italy that rely more heavily on it. That figure was cut nearly in half in 2020, according to the World Travel and Tourism Council.

There is guarded optimism about tourists returning this year, though the EU doesn’t expect growth in the industry to return to 2019 levels until at least 2023.

Schade has flexibilit­y because she works for an airline, but a confusing patchwork of restrictio­ns has made booking trips trickier for average travelers. And European travelers still aren’t welcome in the U.S.

Within Europe, government­s use a traffic-light system where countries in green are deemed safe and countries in red unsafe, but they don’t all use the same criteria, befuddling those who want to take a trip.

While the EU agreed that member countries should gradually remove restrictio­ns on travelers from the U.S. and a handful of other countries, it’s ultimately up to each country to decide how and when it wants to open its borders. Different countries may also have different requiremen­ts about vaccinatio­ns and covid testing.

Things could get a bit easier, at least for Europeans, when the EU Digital Covid Certificat­e comes into effect next week. The certificat­es will certify EU citizens’ tests and vaccinatio­ns, allowing them to travel among countries without having to quarantine or undergo coronaviru­s tests.

Jennifer Janzen, from Europe’s largest airline associatio­n, Airlines for Europe, is hopeful that the certificat­e, if adopted widely, will help at least combat Europeans’ confusion about travel, merging “27 different systems in order to travel, to one single system.”

She said that most Europeans didn’t bother to travel outside their own countries with rules changing constantly, but an uptick is soon expected.

“We’re going from a … long period of chaos, where nobody traveled, to now, a state where the industry is really hopeful that we will have some sort of recovery for European travel,” Janzen said.

Many businesses that rely on tourists are still in wait-andsee mode.

“Right now there is not much tourism in Barcelona because of the pandemic,” Roger Martin said.

He and his parents own Bar del Pi, a tapas bar and restaurant in the heart of the Spanish city. He said the lack of young tourists and nightlife has meant much less business.

Still, he is hopeful the EU health passport will bring more tourism and investment in local businesses, including his own.

Not everyone has waited for a health passport to make a trip or let pandemic restrictio­ns impede their travel plans.

Irina Gatilova, who lives in the Czech Republic and isn’t yet fully vaccinated, underwent coronaviru­s tests for a recent trip to Italy, also crossing through Austria and Germany. Shortly after, she went on a family trip to Russia, where she currently is, knowing a mandatory quarantine awaits her upon her return home.

Gatilova supports the idea of the EU’s health passport and plans to get one after her second dose of the vaccine.

“Being outside the EU at the moment I don’t feel very comfortabl­e in hotels or public places where they don’t ask for tests and people don’t wear masks,” she said. “If there were compulsory covid passports for travelers, it would give me confidence and peace of mind.”

Recent data from the European Travel Commission found that two-thirds of Europeans plan to travel by the end of November. The travel industry in Europe is feeling additional relief and optimism with American travelers allowed in once again, executive director and CEO Eduardo Santander said.

“U.S. travelers [are] very important for a lot of European destinatio­ns that really depend on them and their market power,” he said, adding that these travelers often visit multiple countries at a time.

But Europeans are still not allowed to visit the U.S. and Santander said that lack of reciprocit­y is posing a challenge for airlines that would prefer not to fly empty planes back to the U.S. Still, U.S. airlines have scrambled to add new transAtlan­tic flight destinatio­ns in wake of the recent news, with American Airlines spokespers­on Nate Gatten welcoming it as a “positive developmen­t.”

For Schade, the relaxation of restrictio­ns means a chance to get out into the world again.

“We were both very covidsafe,” she said, referring to the friend she plans to travel with. “So [this trip] is our first time… being out and able to do stuff that’s not at home.”

 ?? (AP) ?? People mill about the arrivals area at Heathrow Airport in London, during England’s coronaviru­s lockdown in January.
(AP) People mill about the arrivals area at Heathrow Airport in London, during England’s coronaviru­s lockdown in January.

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