Skift Take

There's a lot riding on how big the so-called green list of countries will be, but travel companies shouldn't get their hopes up. The government has caution top of mind after making so many mistakes.

The CEO of easyJet said Britain was likely to be left behind the rest of Europe if the government does not allow quarantine-free travel to most of the continent when it announces where people can go on Friday.

Britain is set to publish its “green list” of low risk places where people can travel without needing to quarantine on their return home, but reports suggest that just a handful of countries will make the list, with major destinations like Spain and Greece excluded.

A limited list will be a blow to UK-based easyJet, whose home market is its biggest and which is counting on a big pick-up in travel to help repair its finances after a year of Covid-19 restrictions.

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CEO Johan Lundgren told the FT Live online conference on Thursday that with Europe opening up it would be ironic that the “UK, which has been the most advanced when it comes to the rollout of the vaccination programme, is actually going to find themselves left behind.

“I think this is going to need to change, it’s going to need to change very rapidly,” he said.

Smaller holiday destinations such as Gibraltar, Iceland, Israel and Malta are expected to make the green list, while airlines and travel companies are hoping that bigger markets like Portugal and the U.S. will also be on it.

Returning to the UK from a green list country will involve taking two Covid-19 tests, one before arrival and one on or before the second day of returning.

Britain has said that it will review travel plans again in late June, meaning that easyJet and competitors Ryanair, TUI, Jet2 and British Airways, could be forced to wait for a larger scale reopening of UK travel.

“There’s a lot of things that need to come into place here in order for us to have a strong summer but I still believe that we’ll have (one),” Lundgren said.

(Reporting by Sarah Young; editing by Paul Sandle and Jason Neely)

This article was from Reuters and was legally licensed through the Industry Dive publisher network. Please direct all licensing questions to [email protected].

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Tags: british airways, coronavirus, easyjet, greece, jet2, ryanair, spain, tui, uk

Photo credit: EasyJet and other airlines could be forced to wait for a larger scale reopening of UK travel, as the government will review its travel plans in late June. Rob Hodgkins / Flickr

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