Coronavirus: Airlines call for rapid Covid tests to be used for international travel

Airlines call for rapid Covid tests to be used to allow international travel this summer ‘because they work just as well as hotel quarantine’

  • International Air Transport Association warns airlines will keep suffering in 2021 
  • Governments insisting on people getting expensive lab tests will hit demand
  • Commissioned research finds rapid tests are just as effective at stopping Covid 
  • IATA hopes the speedy swab tests could be used to reopen travel this summer 

Airlines are calling for rapid Covid tests to be used as standard for international travellers to ‘reopen’ the industry.

The International Air Transport Association (IATA) union has published research claiming that using rapid tests could work as well as a 10-day quarantine policy.

And it said the cost and time required to use proper lab-based PCR tests to test travellers would keep the holiday industry on its knees.

A family of four could face a testing bill of £1,600 to use privately-bought tests, the IATA said, and it warned passenger numbers could fall by two thirds because of this.

Rapid swab tests, however, were significantly cheaper and faster to use and could help stem airlines’ losses by half, it suggested.

The IATA did not call for a total change to the current policy of a 10-day quarantine with three tests, but wants the rapid tests to be accepted as standard by officials.

But rapid tests, currently used in schools, care homes and offices around the UK, have been controversial because they don’t work as well as the PCR swabs.

Generally speaking the quick tests are less sensitive, meaning it is more common for them to fail to detect when someone is infected with Covid, compared to lab tests. 

The IATA, which represents 290 major airlines including British Airways, TUI, Virgin Atlantic and Condor, commissioned the research from consulting firms Oxera and Edge Health.

The IATA, which represents 290 major airlines including British Airways, TUI, Virgin Atlantic and Condor, is calling for rapid tests to be made standard for international travellers this summer, instead of lab tests (Pictured: Condor planes on a runway in Dusseldorf, Germany)

Oxera’s Michele Granatstein said: ‘The choice of a rapid test would be a real boost to the global travel and international business community, and our research shows it can be as effective as other testing regimes and as effective as a ten-day quarantine.’

CEO at the IATA, Alexandre de Juniac, added: ‘We are already seeing rapid testing becoming commonplace in non-travel settings such as schools and workplaces. 

‘Extending its use to travel is a logical step. Science backs this up. 

In real world conditions, antigen testing is as effective as PCR testing in reducing the risk of cross-border transmission. 

‘Meanwhile the cost and bureaucracy of PCR tests adds huge burdens to families and businesses looking to travel. These are important considerations in preparing for a successful re-start.’

It is currently illegal to travel abroad for a holiday but people with reasons approved by the Government are allowed to fly.

They must follow specific rules when returning to Britain, however, and quarantine for 10 days and get tested twice after arriving in England, as well as once before.

During the quarantine, people are not allowed to leave the place they are staying, meet anyone else there or see visitors who didn’t travel with them. 

People must test negative for Covid before they board the plane and then again on the second and then eight days of the quarantine. 

Currently, all these tests must be PCR tests in which the nose and throat swab is posted to a laboratory to be examined with high quality machinery. It can take two or more days for a result to be returned, and the tests can cost over £100 a time.

The IATA is now calling for the Government to allow the use of rapid tests, which are cheaper and faster – taking around 15 minutes and costing £10-20.