EasyJet warns passengers could be stuck on planes and says 'there will be disruption' in major travel rule change
EasyJet boss Johan Lundgren has warned that passengers could be stuck on planes when the European Union launches its enhanced border checks. He predicted that “there will be some disruption” when the EU introduces the Entry/Exit System (EES) later this year.
The airline chief executive warned that airlines being unable to disembark passengers because of congested terminal buildings would be a “worst case” consequence of the EES. The EU Commission announced in August that EES would be launched on November 10, although a further update is expected to be made on Thursday.
It was first proposed in 2016 but its introduction has been repeatedly delayed. Under the scheme, travellers from non-EU countries such as the UK will need to have their fingerprints scanned and a photograph taken to register them on a database when they enter a member state, with the data stored for three years.
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But there are fears this will spark queues at EU airports, as well as the Port of Dover, Eurotunnel’s terminal in Folkestone and London’s St Pancras railway station, where French border checks are carried out before people embark on cross-Channel journeys. In an interview at the annual convention of travel trade organisation Abta in Costa Navarino, Greece, Mr Lundgren said it is possible EES will cause airport terminals to be congested with arriving passengers waiting to be processed, leaving no room for additional travellers.
“In the worst case you actually can’t disembark, you hold people on the plane,” Mr Lundgren warned. He said: “We have to think about what can actually happen.”
Mr Lundgren predicted “there will be some disruption” from EES as “it is a new procedure”. He called