Portugal removed from ‘green list’ of Covid
travel destinations
Change dismays travel industry and tourists, as no
countries added to England’s quarantine-free list
The first
incarnation of the green list, announced on 7 May, comprised a dozen countries
and territories, but several were in effect inaccessible to arrivals.
Peter
Walker and Rob Davies
Thu 3 Jun
2021 14.45 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2021/jun/03/england-covid-travel-restrictions-green-list-update
Portugal
has been removed from the government’s “green list” of destinations from which
people can return to England without having to quarantine, and no extra
countries have been added, it is understood.
The
decision, set to be confirmed later on Thursday with an updated list of
countries on green, amber and red lists, will dismay holidaymakers and the
travel industry, with hundreds of millions of pounds immediately wiped off the
value of tour operators and airlines.
It is also
expected to anger some Conservative MPs, with one saying the decision “puts a
question mark” over a large number of jobs in the travel and aviation
industries.
The
government had said countries moved from the green list would come into effect
in a week, giving people already in the country time to return. However, some
reports said this could happen to Portugal from Tuesday.
While
travel rules are a devolved matter, the initial list of countries was unified
across all UK nations.
Green list
destinations are the only effective choice for holidays. They allow travellers
to return to England without quarantining, although they must take a Covid test
before coming back and within two days of arriving.
Henry
Smith, the Conservative MP whose Crawley constituency includes Gatwick airport,
said he was “very concerned that we’re not being more ambitious” over travel,
saying: “I think we should be going in the other direction and liberalising the
amount of countries on the green travel list.”
He added:
“This decision really puts a question mark over a significant number of travel
and aviation sector jobs going forward, if they can’t manage to have something
of a summer season. I think it’s going to lead to increased unemployment.
“As an
island trading nation I think it impacts our economy more broadly, beyond the
immediate aviation and travel sectors, and will mean that there will be people
in the industry, and beyond, having to come to the government for bailouts and
benefits in the coming months.”
Reports of
the decision caused the stock market value of tour operator Tui to fall 3%,
while easyJet and British Airways owner IAG both shed more than 5% as they lost
one of their only major sources of revenue from holidaymakers.
During the
brief period that Portugal was on the green list, it offered a lifeline to the
hard-hit tourism industry, given the restrictions already in place on travel to
destinations such as Spain and Greece.
Asked for a
response to the decision, one tourism industry source said: “Do you want four
letter words or what?”
It had been
anticipated that, at most, relatively few new places would be placed on the
green list, and that these would not cover popular holiday destinations such as
France and mainland Spain.
Even if
France had been added, as of this week UK travellers face restrictions on any
non-essential travel to the country, as it seeks to curb the spread of the
highly transmissible Delta coronavirus variant, which was first detected in
India and is becoming dominant in the UK.
The first
incarnation of the green list, announced on 7 May, comprised a dozen countries,
but several were effectively inaccessible to arrivals, notably Australia and
New Zealand. The only mainstream tourist destinations were Portugal, Gibraltar
and Israel.
The bulk of
countries remain on the amber list. While it is not illegal to go to one of
these for a holiday, it is strongly discouraged. People who come to the UK from
one must take a Covid test before travelling, and on day two and eight once
they are in the UK, and must quarantine at home or in a hotel for 10 days.
Anyone
returning from the 30-plus red list countries has to undergo the same testing
and quarantining regime, but do it while staying in one of the designated
quarantine hotels at a cost of £1,750 per adult.
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