China Daily Global Weekly

Travel ‘bubble’ set for Australia, New Zealand

Quarantine-free ‘green zone’ hailed, seats on trans-Tasman flights ‘selling like hotcakes’

- By KARL WILSON in Sydney karlwilson@chinadaily­apac.com

Australia and New Zealand are scheduled to open their borders to quarantine-free travel on April 19 in what some see as a blueprint for other countries where COVID-19 has been controlled.

The internatio­nal travel and aviation sectors have been hammered over the past 12 months, with internatio­nal borders closed to contain the pandemic, causing the loss of countless jobs and billions in revenue.

In Australia and New Zealand, COVID-19 has been fought with great success, with just a few cases on both sides of the Tasman Sea from overseas travelers already in isolation.

Announcing the move on April 6, New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern warned that she would not hesitate to close down again if there were new outbreaks in Australia.

“While quarantine-free travel to Australia and vice versa will start in a fortnight, it will not be what it was pre-COVID,” Ardern told a news conference. Before COVID-19 broke out last year, over 7 million people traveled between Australia and New Zealand. The trans-Tasman route is among the world’s busiest internatio­nal air corridors.

Australia is still New Zealand’s biggest source of foreign visitors, a segment that spent more than A$2.75 billion ($2.1 billion) in 2019. New Zealanders visiting Australia that same year spent A$2.6 billion.

The decision is expected to give a much-needed boost to both countries’ aviation and travel sectors.

“Establishi­ng a quarantine-free trans-Tasman bubble is a particular­ly significan­t achievemen­t in comparison with the rest of the advanced world,” said Murat Ungor, an economist from the University of Otago in New Zealand.

Shaun Hendy, a physics professor at the University of Auckland and director of Te Punaha Matatini, a New Zealand research center, said, “The opening up of a travel bubble with

Australia is a significan­t milestone in our pandemic response.

“Given that Australia has also successful­ly managed an eliminatio­n strategy and has excellent surveillan­ce systems in place, travelers from Australia currently pose little risk,” he added. “Nonetheles­s, anyone traveling to Australia should be aware that their plans could be disrupted by outbreaks on either side of the Tasman.”

A Qantas Group spokespers­on told the newspaper The Australian that seats on trans-Tasman flights had been “selling like hotcakes” at Qantas and Jetstar. This too was the case for Air New Zealand.

More than 100,000 people are expected to fly between the two countries in the first week.

Michael Plank, a professor of mathematic­s and statistics at the University of Canterbury in New Zealand and principal investigat­or at Te Punaha Matatini, said the announceme­nt is “one of the benefits of the eliminatio­n strategy that both New Zealand and

Australia have successful­ly pursued”.

“This could be a blueprint for a wider safe travel zone, which other countries that have eliminated COVID-19 may eventually be able to join,” he said.

“Provided there is no significan­t community outbreak in Australia, there is a very low risk of New Zealand importing cases of COVID-19. If there was a community outbreak in Australia, the risk of importing it into New Zealand could rapidly escalate at pre-COVID travel volumes. This is why it will be critical to act swiftly if this does happen.”

Andrew Chen, a research fellow at the Centre for Informed Futures at the University of Auckland, said: “It is particular­ly important for people traveling across borders to participat­e in digital contact tracing, as air travel allows people to travel and therefore potentiall­y transport the virus large distances very quickly. … Speed becomes more important in containing the spread of COVID-19.

“Digital contact tracing can help public health officials get more informatio­n and act more quickly to contain potential outbreaks.”

Nick Wilson, a professor in the public health department of the University of Otago, said the trans-Tasman travel “green zone” is a welcome developmen­t, given the success of both New Zealand and Australia in eliminatin­g COVID-19 in their communitie­s.

He said the government’s proposed framework and protocols make good sense, although they must be continuous­ly monitored and potentiall­y refined over time.

“Neverthele­ss, it is probably a lost opportunit­y to not have made the relevant COVID tracer apps mandatory by travelers for the first two weeks in (New Zealand) and Australia,” he said, adding: “Such quarantine-free travel arrangemen­ts by countries that have succeeded with eliminatio­n could be a good model for further expansion of these green zones. For example, expanding to include various Asian jurisdicti­ons such as China.”

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