The UK government moved to further tighten travel restrictions today, to prevent the spread of Covid-19 and its new variants, by imposing hotel quarantine on arrivals into the country from 'Red List' nations.
The government said that the expected mandatory quarantine in government-approved hotels will start from 15 February and will be imposed on arrivals from its list of countries with a travel ban, namely the whole of South America, southern and central Africa, Portugal, the UAE and Cape Verde. The existing ban already means that only UK and Irish citizens and others with permanent UK residency can enter the UK from those countries. That ban remains in force, with no end-date given.
Further tightening of the UK's travel restrictions can only put further pressure on jet fuel demand and prices in an already-weakened European market. Earlier today Scandinavian airline SAS said its passenger numbers in January were down by 85pc from a year earlier. And earlier this week the International Air Transport Association (Iata) said it expects the outlook for global air travel demand to deteriorate further, as forward bookings have dropped because of continuing travel restrictions and blanket entry bans in some countries. It said forward bookings made in January were down by 70pc on the year, and that total air travel demand dropped by almost two thirds in 2020 from a year earlier.