After $4 billion in losses, Heathrow tells UK to open up travel
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[July 26, 2021] By
Sarah Young
LONDON (Reuters) -London's Heathrow Airport
urged Britain to open up travel to vaccinated passengers after its
recovery fell behind hubs elsewhere in Europe, pushing its cumulative
pandemic losses to $4 billion.
Heathrow, which before the pandemic was Europe's busiest airport, said
Britain's travel restrictions were suppressing trade volumes and
traveller demand, and government action was needed quickly or jobs would
be lost.
Passenger levels at Heathrow were about 20-25% of their pre-pandemic
levels, while European airports are already back to about 50%, said
Heathrow Chief Executive John Holland-Kaye.
"Without the passenger planes going to global markets like the U.S., UK
exports aren't getting out of the country, and the UK will fall behind
and that will cost jobs, unless we open up," he told Reuters on Monday.
Heathrow wants Britain to allow fully vaccinated people from the United
States and the European Union to be able to travel into Britain without
needing to quarantine for 10 days, and says that level of opening up
would help fuel a stronger recovery.
"Europeans have already opened up unilaterally with the United States,
and got the benefits of doing it. There's no reason why the UK shouldn't
do the same," he said, adding he believed it could happen as soon as
this week.
For the whole of 2021, Heathrow forecast 21.5 million passengers would
travel through its terminals, a big jump from 4 million in the first six
months of the year as restrictions ease and travel demand grows, but a
long way off the 81 million who used its facilities in 2019.
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Passengers wait on socially distanced chairs at Heathrow Airport
amid the coronavirus disease (COVID19) pandemic in London, Britain
July 7, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Coombs
Holland-Kaye said he was encouraged by a recent pickup as school holidays
started. Separately Ryanair said it was seeing strong summer bookings.
Yet high levels of COVID-19 cases in the UK and the government's track record of
ultra-cautious rules for travel - and last-minute changes to quarantine
requirements - mean uncertainty continues to plague the travel sector.
Heathrow said worries over bringing in new restrictions or other countries
barring UK travellers, had pushed it to seek a waiver of its Heathrow Finance
ICR covenant for 2021 to cover it in case passenger numbers significantly miss
its 21 million forecast.
For the six months to June 30, Heathrow posted an adjusted loss before tax of
787 million pounds ($1.1 billion), compared with a 471 million loss for the same
period last year which was only half affected by the pandemic.
($1 = 0.7274 pounds)
(Reporting by Sarah YoungEditing by Guy Faulconbridge and David Holmes)
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