The Mercury News

Biden hints at boosting travel to Europe

Many countries have lifted ban on fully vaccinated

- By David Koenig

A comment by President Joe Biden is encouragin­g airlines to hope that travel between the United States and Europe could be expanded in time for last-minute, late-summer vacation trips.

At a news conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Biden was asked about ending restrictio­ns that bar most European visitors from entering the United States.

Biden said Thursday that a team that is advising him on the pandemic “brought that subject up. It’s in the process of (considerin­g) how soon we can lift the ban ... and I will be able to answer that question to you within the next several days.”

An official with the U.S. Travel Associatio­n, a trade group for the broader tourism industry, praised Biden’s comments.

“The science says we can safely reopen internatio­nal travel now, particular­ly for countries that have made considerab­le progress toward vaccinatin­g their citizens,” said Tori Emerson Barnes, the travel group’s executive vice president of policy, citing studies that concluded there

is a low risk of transmitti­ng the virus during flights. “Each day that outdated restrictio­ns on travel exist wreaks economic damage on our nation.”

Airlines for America, a trade group representi­ng major U.S. carriers, said “the time for action is now” to reopen to internatio­nal visitors. The group noted that the U.S. allows travel to and from Mexico, where less than one-third of the population is vaccinated, while severely restrictin­g travel from Canada and the United Kingdom, two countries with relatively high vaccinatio­n rates.

The rise and prevalence of COVID-19 variants in Europe, especially the delta mutation that is also spreading throughout the U.S., has caused the Biden administra­tion to tread slowly about increasing transatlan­tic travel.

Last month, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the administra­tion was anxious to restore travel “as fully and quickly as possible,” but said he couldn’t put a date on reopening the country. “We have to be guided by the science, by medical expertise.”

Most of continenta­l Europe has relaxed restrictio­ns on Americans who are fully vaccinated, although the United Kingdom still requires quarantine­s for most visitors arriving from the U.S. Airlines say, however, that the lack of two-way travel is limiting the number of flights they can offer and seats they can sell.

In recent months, U.S. airlines have started new service to European countries that are open to American visitors. Delta launched new or resumed service to Greece, Iceland and Croatia, which opened early to vaccinated foreigners. In some cases, Americans who tested negative for the virus were able to skip quarantine requiremen­ts that were in place for other visitors.

Delta Air Lines CEO Ed Bastian said this week that bookings by Americans surged when those countries reopened and others followed.

“The problem is, there are only Americans that we are carrying in (to Europe) and carrying out,” Bastian told The Associated Press.

With most Europeans unable to enter the U.S., Delta has been forced to keep its transatlan­tic capacity at around half the level it was before the pandemic, he said.

 ?? DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A seemingly offhanded remark by President Joe Biden is raising hopes in the airline industry that the U.S. might soon open up to European visitors.
DAVID ZALUBOWSKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A seemingly offhanded remark by President Joe Biden is raising hopes in the airline industry that the U.S. might soon open up to European visitors.

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