Home

UK travel industry wants COVID rules eased

Sarah YoungAAP
Some UK groups have launched legal action to get the government to ease travel rules.
Camera IconSome UK groups have launched legal action to get the government to ease travel rules. Credit: AP

Britain's airlines and holiday companies are planning a "day of action" to ramp up pressure on the government to ease travel restrictions, with just weeks to go before the start of the peak summer season.

Travel companies, whose finances have been stretched to breaking point during the pandemic, are desperate to avoid another summer lost to COVID-19. But with Britain's strict quarantine requirements still in place that now looks likely.

As the clock ticks down to July, Europe's biggest airline Ryanair and Manchester Airports Group on Thursday launched legal action to get the government to ease the rules before the industry's most profitable season starts.

On Wednesday, pilots, cabin crew and travel agents will gather in Westminster, central London, and at airports across Britain to drum up support.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

Britain's aviation industry has been harder hit by the pandemic than its European peers, according to data published by pilots trade union BALPA on Sunday.

That showed daily arrivals and departures into the United Kingdom were down 73 per cent on an average day earlier this month compared to before the pandemic, the biggest drop in Europe. Spain, Greece and France were down less than 60 per cent.

UK airports were also badly affected, with traffic in and out of London's second busiest airport Gatwick down 92 per cent, according to the data.

Time is running out for the industry, said the union.

"There is no time to hide behind task forces and reviews," said BALPA general secretary Brian Strutton.

"BALPA is demanding that the UK Government gets its act together and opens the US routes and European holiday travel destinations that it has blocked with no published evidence at all."

More than 45,000 jobs have already been lost in UK aviation, with estimates suggesting that 860,000 aviation, travel and tourism jobs are being sustained only by government furlough schemes.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails