The UK government is suspending the country's Covid-19 quarantine-free travel corridor as a result of the new strains of the virus being identified around the globe.
Transport secretary Grant Shapps said that the corridors are being suspended "for now" because it is impossible for scientists to predict which countries or regions will originate new variants of the virus. The suspension will come into force at 04:00 GMT on 18 January, when all entrants to the UK from all countries will need a negative Covid-19 test beforehand and will need to self-isolate for 10 days, with the latter reduced to five days if another negative test is done.
Shapps said that there will be more enforcement checks of the new regulations and fewer exemptions.
The move comes a day after the UK government banned all passenger arrivals into the UK from Portugal and the whole of South America — with the exception of British and Irish nationals and other permanent UK residents — following the detection of a new strain in Brazil. Arrivals into the UK from southern Africa are also banned, following the detection of another new strain there last month.
The newly-identified strains of the coronavirus and the further tightening of travel restrictions in the UK and other countries will weigh further on the jet fuel market in Europe and beyond. Global forward-flight bookings already indicate a continued slump in passenger demand for at least the first quarter of this year. Bookings were already down by more than 80pc globally for February and March compared with the same period last year, according to the International Air Transport Association (Iata).