EU Member States are gradually trying to restart Summer tourism and the release of flights. The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) published a list of airports located in affected areas with high risk of transmission of the CoViD-19 infection. This “blacklist” of airports has 35 countries, cities and airports where the coronavirus pandemic remains out of control. EASA determined this blacklist of airports to support aircraft and aerodrome operators to put in place an extra layer of protection for the passengers and crew members.
Regarding European countries, EASA includes in the “blacklist” airports from the following countries:
EASA’s “black list” of airports includes airports in the following third countries: Afghanistan, Bangladeshis, Belarus, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Dominican, Republic Equator, Egypt, India, Indonesia, Iran, Kuwait, Mexico, Pakistan, Peru, Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Turkey, Ukraine, United Arab Emirates and USA.
The list is developed in coordination with EASA Member States and based on the information from WHO, ECDC and other reputable public health institutes. In addition to the testing ratio, additional parameters have been taken into account, such as:
It is quite a complex situation which requires adjustments as we go along. For this reason, EASA is looking at a more performance based dynamic approach based also on epidemiological knowledge rather than setting a fixed threshold of a single parameter or using just the local/community transmission as the only criteria.
Many of the national public health authorities or public health institutes dropped their assessments and consider all the areas as high risk. For example, the Robert Koch Institute of Germany suspended its assessment of high-risk areas as of 10 April 2020.
The COVID-19 outbreak is having a major impact on European transport and mobility. It caused massive negative demand shocks due to the necessary containment measures along with voluntary efforts of individuals to practice social distancing, minimize commuting and avoid travel. These have led to supply chain disruptions, steep reductions in tourism, and overall reduced mobility.
Temporary restrictions on extra-EU and intra-EU air travel have started to leave a significant mark: compared to the same time last year, there are over 80% fewer flights across the European network, Europe’s largest airports are operating less than 75% of flights and the number of bookings continues to decrease. As around 50% of air freight is carried in the bellies of passenger aircraft, the drop in passenger traffic has led to a significant drop in air cargo capacity, negatively impacting the transport of medical supplies, perishables and other time-sensitive cargo.
Member States are faced with the need to ensure basic connectivity during the COVID-19 outbreak both for passenger transport and for security of supply of essential items, including food and medicine, to keep essential airports open and to plan for ensuring connectivity in the recovery phase.
The European Union Aviation Safety Agency (EASA) launched a programme to monitor the implementation of its COVID-19 operational guidelines in real-life situations. The Agency is inviting European airports and airlines with their national authorities to apply the new standards in practice and report back on their experience, with the objective of fine-tuning the guidelines and developing best practices.
The safe restoration of transport connectivity, and notably in aviation, is a crucial component in the economic recovery from the pandemic.
Henrik Hololei, Director-General for Mobility and Transport
The guidelines, developed by EASA and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) on the basis of scientific evidence and expert opinion, were published last week. The aim is to allow air travel to restart in safe conditions from both an operational and public health point of view. Member states and industry stakeholders provided extensive input through consultation.
Recognising that airports, airlines and aircraft are different, the recommendations deliberately offer some flexibility in approach and explicitly task all relevant aviation organisations with determining how best to apply them in individual locations and situations, with the aim to maximise harmonisation for the resumption of aviation in Europe.
The processes for the resumption of tourism and flights within the EU and beyond are gradually culminating.
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Hi
Actually residence of gulf countries Should not fly to any of European countries due to the alarming number of C-19 and the health and hygiene situation.
As if EU citizens doing any better than the rest of the world!
i don’t have covid19 disease and that’s not fair i just reserved hotels in europe who will compensate me ! i am from kuwait
How you will travel from Kuwait?
You should’ve thought twice before doing that! Who in their right mind book for trips in the midst of a pandemic?!