The United for Travel campaign will help us achieve this, providing a clear and strong message that safe tourism is now possible
The Global Tourism Crisis Committee has met for the first time in
2021. Organized by the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO), the
cross-sector body met in Madrid during the 113th session of the UNWTO
Executive Council to advance solid plans to restart tourism. The meeting
focused on the integration of vaccines into a harmonized approach to
safe travel and launching a coordinated effort to boost confidence in
the sector.
With countries around the world now rolling out vaccines against the
COVID-19 virus, the Committee noted that this opens a critical window in
the fight against the pandemic and promotes the safe resumption of
international travel. Members highlighted the importance of stepping up
coordination, within the framework of the International Health
Regulations, of vaccination certificates to ensure the implementation of
common, harmonized digital-related travel principles, protocols, and
documents. This would be in line with the work being carried out by the
World Health Organization (WHO), which has reported at potential
applications of digital technology to enable safe international travel
and facilitate arrivals and departures.
Harmonized plans and protocols the priority
The Committee’s own Technical Group, chaired by Greece, alongside a
dedicated inter-agency group drawing on diverse parts of the United
Nations system and international organizations, are working to ensure
measures are implemented, including by governments, to foster their
application at every level of tourism. The Technical Group Chairman
Harry Theocharis provided his latest update, showing how concrete steps
have been taken to guarantee a harmonized plan of action.
UNWTO Secretary-General Pololikashvili said: “The rollout of vaccines
is a step in the right direction, but the restart of tourism cannot
wait. Vaccines must be part of a wider, coordinated approach that
includes certificates and passes for safe cross-border travel. In the
longer-term, we also need to restore confidence in tourism. The United
for Travel campaign will help us achieve this, providing a clear and
strong message that safe tourism is now possible.”
Testing for safe and seamless travel
Alongside the Technical Group’s work, the Committee called for
support of the OECD’s own initiative aimed at developing a harmonized
system of border controls. This would be developed in coordination with
UNWTO as well as with WHO and, representing the civil aviation and the
maritime sectors respectively, ICAO and the IMO.
The Crisis Committee members also called for firm actions to Support
the standardization, digitalization, and interoperability of testing
protocols and certification systems. Members agreed that these should be
based on commonly agreed evidence and risk-assessment indicators for
origin and destination country or territory. The implementation of the
CART Take-Off Guidance, developed by ICAO, was identified as an
effective tool for advancing the harmonization of testing protocols and
accelerating the establishment of Public Health Corridors.
The committee draws on top expertise and leadership
Since the start of the crisis, UNWTO has convened the Committee to
bring together governments, public and private sector leaders, and
international organizations to form a united and efficient response.
Addressing this latest meeting were Margaritis Schinas, Vice President
of the European Commission, OECD Secretary-General Ángel Gurría, and
both tourism ministers from UNWTO’s Member States and leading
representatives of civil aviation and cruise tourism sectors. Joining
them and ensuring the United Nations speaks with one voice were Fang
Liu, Secretary-General, and Kitack Lim, Secretary-General of IMO.
The Global Tourism Crisis Committee met against the backdrop of the
113th session of the UNWTO Executive Council, also being held in Madrid
as a hybrid event. The Council brings together more than 150 in-person
participants alongside participants representing governments and
destinations of every global region, to advance UNWTO’s Programme of
Work and to vote for the Organization’s Secretary-General for 2022-2025.
Crisis Committee: Recommendations and Next Steps
Meeting on the occasion of the 8th Global Tourism Crisis Committee,
held in Madrid, on 18 January 2021 and within the context of the 113th
session of the UNWTO Executive Council, the members of the Committee
recalled: