London’s Heathrow Airport, the U.K.’s busiest, unveiled a new coronavirus testing facility Wednesday that it says could halve the length of time people have to stay at home after arriving from countries on the British government’s quarantine list.
The government said it wasn’t ready to give its backing to the facility but insisted that it was working with airports on how a new testing regime can reduce the 14-day quarantine period that travelers face when arriving from more than 100 countries, including France, Spain, and the United States.
Over the past few weeks, British tourists have faced travel chaos after the government took countries off its safe list at very short notice. The travel advice to the two most visited countries, Spain and France, changed at short notice, for example, prompting many travelers to return to the U.K. swiftly to avoid the mandatory quarantine period.
As well as throwing into turmoil the vacation plans of many British families, the sudden changes have rocked the travel industry, which is trying to salvage something from the summer following weeks of lockdown.
There is growing speculation that Croatia and Greece, two other hugely popular vacation destinations for British families during the summer, could be added to the quarantine list in the coming days, a change that would further disrupt children’s planned return to school at the start of September.
Testing could open up more flights between the United Kingdom and the United States
“Testing will not only avoid the ‘quarantine roulette’ that so many passengers faced in Spain and France, it will also open up flights to key trading partners such as the U.S., Canada and Singapore,” Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye said.
The new facility has been set up by aviation services company Collinson and logistics firm Swissport at Heathrow’s Terminal 2. They say more than 13,000 swab tests will be available to passengers each day, with results “within hours.” It is proposed that arrivals will then take a second test at home and will be able to leave their 14-day quarantine early if they pass both. Similar double-testing regimes are used elsewhere in Europe, including Germany.
“All we need now is government buy-in that those with negative tests will be released early from quarantine,” said Richard Cawthra, chief commercial officer at Swissport.
The U.K. is ramping up the use of rapid-result saliva tests
British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said he understood the inconvenience of the quarantine period and insisted that the government was doing what it can to mitigate the time people have to stay at home on their arrival in the U.K. Hancock said a ramp-up in testing in the coming months via a saliva test leading to more or less instant results would help.
“This moonshot to have testing ubiquitous and available to reopen all sorts of things, to reduce the burden of the quarantine arrangements, which nobody wants to have in place, to allow us to reopen parts of the economy, that is an incredibly important project within government right now,” Hancock told BBC radio.
He refused to be drawn on when population-wide testing would potentially be in place in a country that has recorded more than 41,000 coronavirus-related deaths, Europe’s highest.
“We’re ramping it up over the remainder of this year,” he said. “I’m not going to put a firm deadline on it.”
He also said that further insights about the virus’s prevalence within England will emerge from a wider infection survey from the Office for National Statistics.
The statistics agency will increase the number of people it tests under the survey from 28,000 every two weeks to 150,000 by October.
“This will allow us to further narrow down the areas potentially affected by local outbreaks and continue our fight to curb the spread ahead of winter,” Hancock said.
“The data and insight gathered will help inform our national, regional and local responses to the pandemic, allowing this nation to get back to the things we love doing.”
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