CANBERRA, Jul 12 (NNN-AGENCIES) – Australia’s travel bubble with Singapore has been delayed until the end of 2021.
Dan Tehan, the Minister for Trade, Tourism and Investment, confirmed that the travel bubble, which will allow quarantine-free travel between the two countries for the first time since Mar, 2020, will not open until the end of the year.
The scheme was set to open in Jul or Aug, but has been postponed as a result of Australia’s interrupted vaccine rollout, and the COVID-19 outbreak in Sydney.
“When it comes to when we were looking at a bubble, it has been put back due to the third wave of the virus,” Tehan, who, yesterday departed on a two-week mission to Asia and the United States, told, Nine Entertainment newspapers.
“It’s very difficult to put a time frame on it, but when you look at the plan that Singapore has put in place, and you put it alongside the plan that the prime minister has announced, the hope might be towards the end of the year that you could look at a travel bubble with Singapore.”
More than one-third of Singaporean adults have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 compared to just 10 percent of Australians.
Tehan flagged that, vaccine passports would become a reality for years, when Australians are again allowed to leave the country freely.
“If we are able to open up next year, you would expect that you’re probably looking at 12 months or two years, where this is going to be part of what you’re doing, it could be like the little yellow booklet for yellow fever,” he said.