Heathrow is to fast-track double-jabbed arrivals: Vaccinated BA and Virgin Atlantic passengers on selected flights will get their own lanes under pilot scheme launched this week
- Passengers arriving from selected destinations can use the new fast-track lane
- The trial is being run by Heathrow in partnership with the airlines BA and Virgin
- It comes as Grant Shapps is expected to set out new travel rules later today
- it includes ending requirement of double-jabbed passengers to isolate on return
Heathrow is to trial fast-track lanes for fully-vaccinated arrivals, as the airline industry steps up pressure on ministers to open up quarantine-free travel to amber destinations.
Passengers flying in on selected BA and Virgin flights will be able to upload their coronavirus vaccination certificate before boarding.
On arrival at the airport, passengers will then be directed to dedicated lanes at the border to speed their passage through immigration.
It comes as the Government is set to tear up travel quarantine rules from as early as July 19, allowing millions of fully-vaccinated Britons to take summer holidays abroad without having to self-isolate.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is expected to set out details later this week of the Government's plans to end the requirement for travellers from amber list countries to self-isolate on arrival.
It could open up the possibility of holidays to the likes of Greece, France and Spain this summer.
Currently, those wishing to visit the popular holiday destinations - and others on the Amber list - are required to self-isolate for 10 days when they arrive back in the UK.

Heathrow (pictured: Arrivals at Heathrow Airport) is to trial fast-track lanes for fully-vaccinated arrivals as the airline industry steps up pressure on ministers to open up quarantine-free travel to amber destinations

Arriving passengers queue at UK Border Control at the Terminal 5 at Heathrow Airport in London, Britain, June 29

Heathrow together with British Airways and Virgin Atlantic said the new fast-lane pilot was essential that there was no delay in implementing the changes if the Government, as expected, lifts amber list travel restrictions on double-jabbed passengers.
The scheme will initially involve fully vaccinated volunteers travelling on selected flights from Athens, Los Angeles, Montego Bay, Jamaica, and New York.
Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye said: 'This pilot will allow us to show that pre-departure and arrival checks of vaccination status can be carried out safely at check in, so that fully vaccinated passengers can avoid quarantine from July 19.'
Speaking to BBC Radio Four's Today Programme, he said that the move was important to restore trade links between the UK and the US - saying that the EU had 'come out of the blocks faster' in terms of Transatlantic travel.
He added: 'The US is our biggest trading market, the only country with whom we have a balanced trade surplus.
'And a lot of that trade goes by air on planes from Heathrow, and yet the French and the Germans have got ahead of us by coming out the blocks faster.
'We can't take for granted these historic competitive advantages we have. If we don't get aviation started again then the UK could fall behind.'
His comments were echoed by Virgin Atlantic chief executive Shai Weiss who said: 'To reap the benefits of the UK's world-leading vaccine roll out, the UK Government must act now to remove self-isolation for fully vaccinated passengers arriving from amber countries, and no later than the domestic reopening on July 19.
'The UK is already falling behind US and EU and a continued overly cautious approach towards international travel will further impact economic recovery and the 500,000 UK jobs that are at stake.'
Sean Doyle, British Airways chief executive and chairman, added he was 'confident' the trial would be successful.
He said: 'We look forward to providing the data that proves it's simple for fully vaccinated status to be verified and to the Government meeting its commitment to get the country moving again.'


Heathrow chief executive John Holland-Kaye (pictured left) said the scheme will allow the industry to 'show that pre-departure and arrival checks of vaccination status can be carried out safely at check in'. Virgin Atlantic chief executive Shai Weiss (pictured right) said the Government 'must act now to remove self-isolation for fully vaccinated passengers from Amber list countries'.

Transport Secretary Grant Shapps is expected to set out details later this week of the Government's plans to end the requirement for travellers from amber list countries to self-isolate on arrival

Daily hospitalisations from Covid spiked above 400 today for the first time since March and are starting to rise exponentially, though from a low starting point



Meanwhile, Paul Charles, chief executive of travel consultancy The PC Agency, told The Sun: 'It would be pointless introducing it in mid-August as the summer travel season will have been lost almost entirely — along with tens of thousands of jobs.'
The call came after Health Secretary Sajid Javid announced people in England who have been double jabbed – as well as the under 18s – will no longer have to self-isolate if they have been in contact with someone who tests positive for Covid-19.
However, there was consternation among some Tory MPs the change will not come into force until August 16, almost a month after other controls are due to have ended.
With cases continuing to soar, there were fears millions of people could be required to quarantine in the meantime, potentially damaging output just as the economy looks to pick up pace.
Mr Javid has acknowledged the numbers of new infections could rise to 100,000-a-day as restrictions come to an end.
Ministers are relying on the vaccination programme to protect people from becoming seriously ill with the virus and prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed.
However former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith warned the hospitality sector – already ravaged by the economic fallout from the pandemic – could be particularly hard hit by the delay in easing the self-isolation rules.
'Why would you even go to a pub (after step four of the lifting of lockdown)? This makes it worse,' he told The Daily Telegraph.
'I wouldn't go to a pub that wasn't still having six around a table and social distancing, otherwise you run the risk of everyone in the pub being pinged and locked down.'
Mr Javid said the aim was to 'manage the virus in a way that is proportionate to the pandemic' while maintaining as much freedom as possible.