No fewer than 15 European countries, in addition to the UK, France, Belgium and Spain, are being quarantined through their European partners, Covid’s new soft traffic formula in the EU.
As Covid spreads across Europe, several countries have begun reintroducing border bans and closures for their neighbors. To counter this and allow reopening to continue safely and in accordance with unusual rules, the EU has proposed a formula for traffic lighting fixtures for members.
Instead of the final internal borders, the plan is on a color-coded map of Europe.
Obviously, the map will show where there are restrictions and for whom, based on unusual criteria for ler detection and quarantine.
“. . . we need a clear “green, orange, red” formula and a kaleidoscope of individual measures,” said EU Commissioner for Internal Affairs Ylva Johansson.
But with the threshold of 50 or more cases of coronavirus in line with another 100,000 people over a 14-day period, many countries face quarantine again after the arrival of their Fellow Europeans.
The new regulations place countries on a “red list” and apply quarantine if they exceed this threshold and have a positive rate above 3%, or if new infections exceed 150 in two weeks.
According to the latest knowledge from the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC), it is countries that are at risk of being excluded through other EU/Schengen members:
COUNTRY: 14-day Covid-19 case consisting of 100,000 to 16 September
‘The British face quarantine when they arrive in ALL EU countries while the bloc adopts a standard ‘to impose self-de-insulation’ threshold, the Daily Mail warns.
Since the Bloc uses the same criteria to limit travel, it states that “a recent increase in some cases means that the UK has lately an infection rate of 51. 1 consisting of 100,000 and a positive control rate of 6%, either above the EU threshold.
Not all countries have yet to put the system into force and some cannot.
France, Germany and Spain, in the first place, favor the approach.
Finland already applies such regulations to its northern neighbors as it relaxes quarantine thresholds.
As of Saturday, any traveler from a country with 25 new instances / 100,000 will have to be quarantined and tested. In October, it plans to expand the measurement of traffic lighting devices even for non-European high-risk devices such as the United States.
The plan is based on many more tests, both at home and for high-risk travelers.
Ireland announced new quarantine regulations on Tuesday, which are in line with the European Commission.
As a component of its 6-month ‘Living with Covid-19’ plan, Ireland is removing its ‘green list’ and is instead applying EU thresholds.
“Ireland and Finland will be the first countries to apply restrictions, which will necessarily prevent the British from traveling to those countries,” reports The Sun.
“As a component of the EU plan, the government will abandon the 14-day quarantine era for non-green countries and instead adopt a test formula at airports and ports for incoming passengers,” the Irish Times confirms.
Ireland and Northern Ireland may still be among those quarantined in Europe.
“With 6% positive evidence, the UK infection rate would lead to the quarantine of the new colour-code system proposed by the EU,” says The Telegraph.
And the same is true for all previously indexed countries.
To receive more information on the criteria for the Green and Orange List countries, click here. They won’t have any restrictions.
Until all Europeans have begun to provide compulsory knowledge to the ECDC, it will not be to produce the map that the EU expects it to make, to allow travellers to navigate Europe’s new colour-coded Covid spaces.
I have 3 decades of experience as a journalist, foreign correspondent and writer-photographer, working for print, virtual and radio media on 4 continents,
I have 3 decades of experience as a journalist, foreign correspondent and travel writer-photographer. Working for print, virtual and radio media on 4 continents, I am also an experienced hotel journalist and writer of travel guides and cultural histories in Australia, France. , Italy, Spain, Switzerland and Borneo. Very on the road between my Parisian and Australian bases, I write for Forbes with a globetrotting attitude and a topicality in travel, culture, hospitality, art and architecture. My hobby is to capture the unique people, situations and occasions I encounter along the way, whether in words or images. I have a bachelor’s degree in professional writing from the University of Canberra, a master’s degree in European journalism from Robert Schuman University in Strasbourg and a member of the Society of American Travel Writers: Love for My Wild Local Island of Tasmania fuels my commitment to sustainable travel and conservation.