The next focusIR Investor Webinar takes places on 14th May with guest speakers from Blue Whale Growth Fund, Taseko Mines, Kavango Resources and CQS Natural Resources fund. Please register here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Pin to quick picksInternational Airlines Share News (IAG)

Share Price Information for International Airlines (IAG)

London Stock Exchange
Share Price is delayed by 15 minutes
Get Live Data
Share Price: 178.65
Bid: 178.70
Ask: 178.80
Change: 0.35 (0.20%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.056%)
Open: 178.75
High: 181.20
Low: 177.50
Prev. Close: 178.30
IAG Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

Irish people will be able to travel to other EU members from July 19

Sat, 29th May 2021 12:39

(Alliance News) - Irish people will be able to once again travel to other EU member states from July 19, the government has confirmed.

Ireland will broadly implement the EU's digital Covid certificate from July 19, facilitating travel between EU member states, Norway, Switzerland, Liechtenstein and Iceland.

The digital Covid certificate will facilitate free movement in the EU for people who have been vaccinated or can provide a negative PCR test taken 72 hours prior to arrival.

However, restrictions will remain in place for Great Britain and the US.

Transport Minister Eamon Ryan said: "By the 19th of July, we will remove the ban on non-essential travel.

"We will also fully implement the digital Covid cert, which means that anyone coming from an EU country who has been vaccinated, or has recovered from Covid, or can show a negative PCR test, will be able to move here freely, come back home freely."

Children who are not vaccinated or have not recovered from Covid will still need a PCR test to travel.

Ryan said the return of international travel was not without risk, noting that variants of concerns could cause case numbers to rise.

"We have to be careful as we make this transition" he said.

Similar restrictions will be in place for non-EU countries or "third countries", which will include the US and the UK.

Ryan said that while the UK is a "very close and important neighbour to us", concerns remain about the Indian variant, which has become the dominant strain there.

He added: "We will require people arriving from Great Britain to self-quarantine at home unless they have been fully vaccinated.

"We will keep this under review and I hope later this summer we will be able to open up further to the common travel area, that we have the privilege of sharing with the UK.

"Mandatory auto quarantine will be retained for what we expect to be a very small number of countries and will only be used in relation to variants of concern."

An "emergency brake" system will apply to non-EU/EEA countries, designed to allow a swift response to the emergence of a variant of concern or variant of interest.

Government advice will be to avoid travel to a country where the emergency brake has been applied.

A passenger arriving from a country where the emergency brake has been applied will have to undergo mandatory hotel quarantine, if they cannot provide valid proof that they have been vaccinated.

The approach to travel outside the EU/EEA will also apply to travel to and from Great Britain and the US.

Sinn Fein leader Mary Lou McDonald welcomed the return of international travel in mid-July but warned it has to be done safely.

"I'm sure we are all breathing a huge sigh of relief that at last we are going to regain some of the freedom that we had lost for such a long time," McDonald told RTE.

"Of course at some stage non-essential travel has to resume, the issue here is that it's done safely.

"Over the last year and more we've had many long, hard debates around the use of quarantine, the very necessary use of quarantine, to keep the population safe.

"It needs to be held on reserve, as a public health measure, to be deployed to keep people safe.

"We need to follow the public health advice, of course travelling has to resume at some stage, we can't live in splendid isolation.

"But just be clear, it always has to be in the context of keeping people safe and being aware that the virus is still out there, and there are some really, really nasty variants."

Responding to the news, Aer Lingus welcomed the plan but was critical of the delay in the resumption of the common travel area with Great Britain and the failure to introduce rapid antigen testing for travel.

A spokesperson said: "Flying schedules will be a fraction of normal levels for some time to come.

"While Aer Lingus welcomes the easing of travel restrictions announced today, it will not facilitate a significant level of travel to and from Ireland during the critical summer months of 2021.

"It is also disappointing that the reopening of the common travel area is delayed and that EU-approved rapid antigen testing has not been approved as a standard of pre-departure testing."

The airline, part of International Consolidated Airlines Group SA, said it is facing significant restructuring to rebuild its network and financial strength following the pandemic.

By James Ward, PA

source: PA

Copyright 2021 Alliance News Limited. All Rights Reserved.

More News
3 Oct 2023 10:55

Aurrigo inks deal with British Airways parent IAG for aviation tech

(Alliance News) - Aurrigo International PLC on Tuesday said that it has signed a formal partnership agreement with British Airways parent International Consolidated Airlines Group SA for the deployment and demonstration of Aurrigo's autonomous aviation solutions within the UK.

Read more
28 Sep 2023 17:28

IAG, Lufthansa and Air France KLM keen on stake in Portugal's TAP

(Alliance News) - The Portuguese government on Thursday opened the sale of a majority stake in flag carrier TAP, with Deutsche Lufthansa AG quickly expressing interest and other European rivals also expected to be keen. 

Read more
19 Sep 2023 09:46

LONDON BROKER RATINGS: HSBC cuts NatWest; Stifel likes Computacenter

(Alliance News) - The following London-listed shares received analyst recommendations Tuesday morning:

Read more
12 Sep 2023 05:58

UK govt, British Airways face claim over Kuwait hostage crisis

(Alliance News) - Passengers and crew members of a British Airways flight who were taken hostage in Kuwait in 1990 are intending to take legal action against the British government and the airline, a law firm said Tuesday. 

Read more
8 Sep 2023 09:11

UK competition regulator proposes Heathrow charges are reconsidered

(Alliance News) - The competition regulator has provisionally found that some errors were made in a decision on how much Heathrow Airport can charge airlines.

Read more
8 Sep 2023 07:56

Competition regulator mostly backs lower airline price caps at Heathrow

(Sharecast News) - The UK competition regulator has said that the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) made some errors in determining the lower price cap that Heathrow should charge airlines, but said that most of its calculations had been correct.

Read more
30 Aug 2023 17:15

FTSE 100 gains for sixth day on homebuilders' boost

Homebuilders up 1.8%

*

Read more
30 Aug 2023 14:29

Airlines count cost of UK traffic control failure

(Alliance News) - The worst disruption to UK air traffic control in almost a decade following a technical fault risks costing carriers around GBP100 million, the head of global airline body IATA estimated Wednesday.

Read more
30 Aug 2023 09:53

UK air traffic control meltdown fault won't happen again - NATS

Head of air traffic control provider says issue fixed

*

Read more
30 Aug 2023 08:21

Britain's air traffic control failure to cost airlines 100 mln stg -IATA head

LONDON, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The cost to airlines from Britain's air traffic control failure on Monday is likely to reach about 100 million pounds ($126 million), Willie Walsh, the head of global airlines group IATA told the BBC on Wednesday. ($1 = 0.7920 pounds) (Reporting by Sarah Young, editing by Elizabeth Piper)

Read more
30 Aug 2023 07:45

UK air traffic control says problem which caused flight cancellations won't happen again

LONDON, Aug 30 (Reuters) - The disruption to flights into and out of Britain caused by a technical failure on Monday will not happen again after changes were made to the system, the head of the country's air traffic control group NATS said.

Read more
29 Aug 2023 21:16

UK air traffic failure set to disrupt flights for days

Around 1,500 flights cancelled on Monday

*

Read more
29 Aug 2023 13:44

UK government orders review into air traffic control chaos

(Alliance News) - The UK government on Tuesday ordered a review after the country's air traffic control system suffered its worst disruption in almost ten years, stranding thousands of passengers.  

Read more
29 Aug 2023 11:51

LONDON MARKET MIDDAY: FTSE outperforms peers; housebuilders rise

(Alliance News) - The FTSE 100 was outperforming its European peers at midday on Tuesday, amid news that UK consumer price inflation is decelerating and the government is scrapping some rules to boost housebuilding.

Read more
29 Aug 2023 07:45

UK air travel disruption to last for days -minister

LONDON, Aug 29 (Reuters) - British transport minister Mark Harper said it would take days to resolve the widespread disruption to flights into and out of the country after air traffic control systems were hit by a technical problem.

Read more

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.