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    Home > Banking > Gatwick Airport urges UK to ease travel rules as seeks reprieve from banks
    Banking

    Gatwick Airport urges UK to ease travel rules as seeks reprieve from banks

    Published by maria gbaf

    Posted on August 17, 2021

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 21, 2026

    Gatwick Airport, facing significant financial losses due to COVID-19, urges the UK government to ease travel restrictions for better recovery. This image highlights their call for policy changes in the banking and finance sector.
    Gatwick Airport urging UK government to ease travel restrictions - Global Banking & Finance Review
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    LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) -Britain’s Gatwick Airport urged the government to make international travel easier after lockdown restrictions drove it to a first-half loss of 245 million pounds ($338 million) and forced it to ask its banks for a temporary reprieve.

    Strict COVID-19 rules during the six months to June 30 meant passenger numbers at Gatwick, usually Britain’s second busiest airport, plunged 97% from pre-pandemic levels.

    The airport, whose majority owner is France’s Vinci alongside minority holder financial investor Global Infrastructure Partners, said it was in talks with its banks over a temporary waiver of its borrowing terms due to the exceptional circumstances affecting air travel.

    Bigger rival Heathrow said in July it had also sought a waiver of a debt covenant.

    Britain has been slower to reopen travel than the rest of Europe despite its fast vaccination programme, prompting heavy criticism from airports as well as airlines like British Airways and easyJet.

    Since July, the government has relaxed some rules but expensive COVID-19 tests for many destinations remain in place, and last minute rule changes have deterred travel.

    Gatwick said Britain was falling behind its European neighbours, with travel bookings at 16% of their pre-pandemic levels, whereas France and Germany had risen to about 50%.

    “Our government needs to act now and remove unnecessary and costly PCR testing requirements for passengers, particularly for those double vaccinated,” Gatwick chief executive Stewart Wingate said in a statement on Friday.

    Gatwick, which last year axed staff and cut costs to help it survive, said it expected passenger numbers to recover in the second half of the year.

    ($1 = 0.7248 pounds)

    (Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Sarah YoungEditing by Jason Neely and Mark Potter)

    LONDON/PARIS (Reuters) -Britain’s Gatwick Airport urged the government to make international travel easier after lockdown restrictions drove it to a first-half loss of 245 million pounds ($338 million) and forced it to ask its banks for a temporary reprieve.

    Strict COVID-19 rules during the six months to June 30 meant passenger numbers at Gatwick, usually Britain’s second busiest airport, plunged 97% from pre-pandemic levels.

    The airport, whose majority owner is France’s Vinci alongside minority holder financial investor Global Infrastructure Partners, said it was in talks with its banks over a temporary waiver of its borrowing terms due to the exceptional circumstances affecting air travel.

    Bigger rival Heathrow said in July it had also sought a waiver of a debt covenant.

    Britain has been slower to reopen travel than the rest of Europe despite its fast vaccination programme, prompting heavy criticism from airports as well as airlines like British Airways and easyJet.

    Since July, the government has relaxed some rules but expensive COVID-19 tests for many destinations remain in place, and last minute rule changes have deterred travel.

    Gatwick said Britain was falling behind its European neighbours, with travel bookings at 16% of their pre-pandemic levels, whereas France and Germany had risen to about 50%.

    “Our government needs to act now and remove unnecessary and costly PCR testing requirements for passengers, particularly for those double vaccinated,” Gatwick chief executive Stewart Wingate said in a statement on Friday.

    Gatwick, which last year axed staff and cut costs to help it survive, said it expected passenger numbers to recover in the second half of the year.

    ($1 = 0.7248 pounds)

    (Reporting by Sudip Kar-Gupta and Sarah YoungEditing by Jason Neely and Mark Potter)

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