IATA Travel Pass will manage and verify the secure flow
of necessary testing or vaccine information among governments, airlines,
laboratories and travellers
The International
Air Transport Association (IATA) Travel Pass, a digital health passport that
will support the safe reopening of borders, is now in the final phase of
development and will see its first cross-border pilot later this year as well
as a launch slated for 1Q2021.
As governments
begin to rely on testing as a replacement of quarantine measures to limit the
risks of Covid-19 importation when reopening their borders to travellers, the
IATA Travel Pass will support the procedure by managing and verifying the
secure flow of necessary testing or vaccine information among governments,
airlines, laboratories and travellers.
The IATA Travel
Pass incorporates four open sourced and interoperable modules which can be
combined for an end-to-end solution. The first module covers a global registry
of health requirements, which enables passengers to find accurate information
on travel, testing and eventually vaccine requirements for their journey.
The second covers a
global registry of testing / vaccination centre, enabling passengers to find
testing centres and labs at their departure location which meet the standards
for testing and vaccination requirements of their destination.
The third module
takes in the Lab App, which enables authorised labs and test centres to
securely share test and vaccination certificates with passengers.
Lastly, the
Contactless Travel App enables passengers to create a digital passport; receive
test and vaccination certificates and verify that they are sufficient for their
itinerary; and share testing or vaccination certificates with airlines and
authorities to facilitate travel. This app can also be used by travellers to
manage travel documentation digitally and seamlessly throughout their journey,
improving travel experience.
IATA Travel Pass is
based on industry standards and IATA’s proven experience in managing
information flows around complex travel requirements. IATA’s Timatic, which is
used by most airlines to manage compliance with passport and visa regulations,
is the base for the global registry and verification of health requirements.
IATA’s One ID
initiative, which was endorsed by a resolution at its 75th Annual General
Meeting in 2019 to securely facilitate travel processes with a single identity
token, is the base for the IATA Contactless Travel App.
IATA and
International Airlines Group (IAG) have been working together in the
development of this solution and will undertake a trial to demonstrate that
this platform combined with Covid-19 testing can reopen international travel
and replace quarantine.
“Today borders are
double locked. Testing is the first key to enable international travel without
quarantine measures. The second key is the global information infrastructure
needed to securely manage, share and verify test data matched with traveler
identities in compliance with border control requirements. That’s the job of
IATA Travel Pass. We are bringing this to market in the coming months to also
meet the needs of the various travel bubbles and public health corridors that
are starting operation,” said Alexandre de Juniac, IATA’s director general and
CEO.
Nick Careen, IATA
senior vice president, airport, passenger, cargo and security, commented: “Our
main priority is to get people travelling again safely. In the immediate term
that means giving governments confidence that systematic Covid-19 testing can
work as a replacement for quarantine requirements. And that will eventually
develop into a vaccine programme. The IATA Travel Pass is a solution for both.”
Careen explained
that the IATA Travel Pass’s interoperability will allow it to be used in
combination with other providers or as a standalone end-to-end solution.
Throughout the
travel and tourism crisis, IATA has advocated the use of rapid, accurate,
affordable, easy-to-operate, scalable and systematic Covid-19 testing for all
passengers before departure as an alternative to restrictive quarantine
measures in order to re-establish global air connectivity.
Earlier in June,
Juniac had expressed: “Imposing quarantine measures on arriving travelers keeps
countries in isolation and the travel and tourism sector in lockdown.”
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