From Reuters:
“New Zealand to reopen borders
sooner than planned after years of COVID isolation”
New Zealand is bringing forward
the opening of its international borders to some travellers after more than two
years of COVID-19 isolation, with Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern saying an
influx of tourists will boost the nation's economy. The change means the end of
some of the toughest border controls in the world during the COVID pandemic,
imposed as the government tried to keep the coronavirus out, comes months ahead
of the previous schedule. New Zealand's policies helped keep infections and
deaths low. But with the Omicron variant now rampant, criticism has grown as
business, particularly tourism, and agricultural sectors see little value in
staying shut off from the world.
Ardern told reporters on
Wednesday that vaccinated travellers from Australia, New Zealand's biggest
source of tourists, can enter without the need to quarantine from April 12 rather
than July as previously planned. Tourists from visa-waiver countries including
the United States, Britain and Singapore will now able to visit from May 1. "Closing
our border was one of the first actions we took to stop COVID-19, over two
years ago, and its reopening will spur our economic recovery throughout the
remainder of the year," she said. The changes mean Australians will be
able to travel to New Zealand in time for Easter school holidays next month. All
visitors must be vaccinated and provide negative COVID tests, but would not
have to quarantine on arrival. The border is not scheduled to fully reopen
until October to all travellers, but Ardern said this could also yet be brought
forward.
SLOW RETURN The news
boosted airline and travel stocks in Australia and New Zealand, with Air New
Zealand (AIR.NZ) up 2.2%, Qantas Airways (QAN.AX) rising 2.5% and Auckland
Airport (AIA.NZ) gaining 1.1% in afternoon trading. Foreigners were
previously banned outright from entering, and until the last month citizens
looking to return had to either make emergency requests to the government or
secure a spot in state quarantine facilities. "While we know it
will take some time to see tourism scale up again, today's announcement will be
a welcome boost for our tourism operators who have done it harder than
many," Ardern said. Closed borders have had a significant impact on
the economy, cutting off the supply of seasonal labourers from Pacific nations
and reducing air shipping options, as well as halting international tourism.
Prior to border closures, tourism directly contributed around 5.5% of GDP,
or around NZ$41 billion ($28 billion). A further NZ$11 billion was indirectly
generated by the sector. A return to pre-COVID tourism levels remains a
long way off. Chinese tourists, which made up around 11% of visitors
previously, can't visit before October at this stage and others are expected to
be more wary of travelling. Lynda Keene, chief executive at the Tourism
Export Council of New Zealand, said Australians are more likely to visit than
other nationalities, and tourist numbers are not expected to return to
pre-COVID levels until the year ending May 2026. Labour shortages should also
start to ease with the opening of the border longer term, but for most of the
viticulture and horticulture sector it's too late for this season with the
harvest nearly done. "It's good news, but there is a 'but',"
said Chris Lewis, immigration spokesperson for Federated Farmers, who expects
it will take until at least October before things really start to improve.
^ Hopefully this opening plan
continues. New Zealand has shut itself off from the whole world for way too
long. ^
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