By Sarah Young
LONDON, April 6 (Reuters) - British Airways and Virgin
Atlantic expect international travel from Britain to resume on
May 17 despite the government warning it is too soon to say
whether holidays can go ahead this year.
The UK government has said it will provide more details on
restarting foreign travel this week after holidays were banned
in the latest COVID-19 lockdown. But rising infection rates in
Europe have threatened the hoped-for recovery.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday he did not
underestimate the challenge ahead.
The airline industry believes, however, that come mid-May
more vaccines will have been rolled out in key destinations,
bringing infection levels under control, while a UK traffic
light system - tailoring rules to the risks in each country -
should prevent coronavirus variants from being imported.
"We see nothing in the data that suggests that we shouldn't
be opening up travel on the 17th of May." British Airways (BA)
CEO Sean Doyle told a media briefing on Tuesday, referring to
the government's original plan for when travel might resume.
Speaking alongside Doyle, Virgin Atlantic CEO Shai Weiss
said the United States should be on Britain's "green" list of
countries qualifying for relatively restriction-free travel.
BA and Virgin are rivals on trans-Atlantic routes.
Doyle was also optimistic the green list would have expanded
by the summer as vaccination campaigns ramp up, particularly in
continental Europe.
The government has advised Britons not to book foreign
holidays, but after a year of minimal revenues due to the
pandemic, airlines are desperate for an end to restrictions.
Without a significant resumption of travel this summer, most
will need to raise new funds to help ensure their survival. They
have taken on new debt to make it this far.
Both airline bosses declined to say how they would fine-tune
their route maps to reflect likely green-list countries, which
could include Israel, Portugal and the United Arab Emirates.
Doyle said BA was waiting for government recommendations
expected later this week to plan its summer.
The bosses said they would need to know which countries were
likely to be on which list and have enough detail to plan for
May 17 and beyond, as bringing staff back from furlough, getting
planes ready and opening terminals would take weeks.
The executives, and Heathrow airport CEO John Holland-Kaye
who also spoke at the briefing, urged the government to approve
the use of digital travel passes, which would include test and
vaccine certificates. The industry has said checks on paper
certificates would cause delays.
"We need to standardise and simplify and automate as much as
possible," said Holland-Kaye.
(Reporting by Sarah Young. Editing by Mark Potter)