We would love to hear your thoughts about our site and services, please take our survey 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: 177.20
Bid: 177.05
Ask: 177.15
Change: 0.90 (0.51%)
Spread: 0.10 (0.056%)
Open: 176.85
High: 177.40
Low: 174.25
Prev. Close: 176.30
IAG Live PriceLast checked at -

Watchlists are a member only feature

Login to your account

Alerts are a premium feature

Login to your account

UPDATE 2-Vaccinated Brits could be back on Europe's beaches soon - minister

Tue, 22nd Jun 2021 07:45

* Britain working on plans to ease travel

* Double-vaccinated could be spared travel red tape

* Travel sector demands easing of rules
(Adds details on travel industry)

By Guy Faulconbridge and Alistair Smout

LONDON, June 22 (Reuters) - Britain is working on easing
travel restrictions for the fully vaccinated to allow people to
enjoy a summer holiday on Europe's beaches but the plans are not
finalised yet, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said on Tuesday.

Currently British citizens are essentially prevented from
travelling to most countries - including those in the European
Union - as the quarantine and testing rules are so cumbersome
and expensive.

British tourists are the second biggest outbound holiday
spenders in Europe after Germans so their absence hurts the
economies of southern Europe while the British tourism sector is
reeling from a ruinous loss of income due to the restrictions.

Hancock told Sky News that the government did want to let
people have a family holiday abroad, but only when it was safe
to do so.

"The whole point of the vaccine programme is to be able to
remove restrictions, and for people to be able to be kept safe
by the vaccine, rather than by these rules," Hancock told LBC.

"So we are working on a plan for double vaccinated people,
using tests, to have that testing regime in place, instead of
having to have the quarantine, in some circumstances," he said.

Asked by Sky if vaccinated people would get their freedom
back by August and so enjoy a foreign holiday this year, Hancock
said he understood people wanted their freedoms back.

For months, British ministers have given a host of
contradictory signals about when and how travel rules will be
eased more than a year since the most onerous restrictions in
Britain's peacetime history were imposed to halt the virus.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said on Monday that travellers
would face hassle and delays this year if they sought to go
abroad because the priority would be keeping the country safe.

Johnson, who was slow to impose an initial lockdown in 2020,
is wary of moving too fast to open up travel as the Delta
variant first detected in India spreads.

Britain has the seventh highest death toll from COVID-19
globally of nearly 128,000 deaths but has one of the fastest
vaccine rollouts in the world, with 80% of adults having
received a first COVID-19 vaccine dose and nearly 60% a second
shot.

HOLIDAY TIME?

Popular European holiday destinations for Britons, including
Spain, Portugal, France, Italy and Greece, are currently rated
"amber", which require returning passengers to take three
expensive COVID-19 tests and isolate for 10 days on return.

But travel companies are desperate to avoid another summer
lost to COVID-19, and have demanded the government acts.

European Union countries have already agreed to an easing of
travel restrictions over summer that will allow fully vaccinated
tourists to avoid tests or quarantines and broaden the list of
EU regions from which it is safe to travel, but Britain has yet
to announce a similar scheme.

Britain's leading travel companies such as the British
Airways-owner IAG and easyJet have cut
thousands of jobs and raised billions of pounds to survive the
pandemic.

The Times newspaper reported that Britain would announce an
easing on Thursday to allow British holidaymakers who have had
both coronavirus jabs to enjoy more quarantine-free travel from
August.

It is unclear how children - who have not yet been offered a
vaccine in Britain - will travel. Hancock refused to give
details or a timeframe for an easing of restrictions but said he
was supportive of a change.

"It is absolutely something we're working on - it's
something I want to see," he said.
(Writing by Guy Faulconbridge and Alistair Smout; additional
reporting by Kate Holton
Editing by Raissa Kasolowsky)

More News
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
29 Aug 2023 05:51

Travel disruption could last days after UK air traffic control fault

(Alliance News) - Travel disruption could last for days after flights were cancelled leaving thousands of passengers stranded following an air traffic control technical fault.

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.