EU’s Digital Covid Certificate And What It Means For Travel

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If you are a European traveller and heading to Europe it’s mandatory for the EU’s Digital Covid Certificate, reports BBC.

The EU’s Digital Covid Certificate – its vaccine “passport” – is being rolled out across all 27 member nations. 

Need proof

It’s a way for citizens across the EU to prove they have:

  • been vaccinated against Covid-19.
  • recently had a negative PCR test for the virus.
  • recently recovered from Covid-19.

It’s available in, and recognised by, all 27 EU member states – plus Switzerland, Iceland, Norway and Liechtenstein. It’s free – and all EU citizens, as well as non-EU nationals legally staying or living in the member states (with the right to travel to other member states), can download it or obtain a paper copy.

Some countries have already been using the certificate on a voluntary basis – but it was officially introduced on 1 July with a six-week phase-in period.

It will have a quick-response (QR) code with a digital signature key unique to the place an individual’s vaccine information is stored – a hospital, test centre or health authority, for example. The individual’s data remains on the certificate and is not stored or retained when it’s verified – at an airport, for example.

Why is it needed?

It’s hoped the certificate will make it easier for people to travel around the EU. It is not a travel document – they will still need to carry a passport or another form of identification. But anyone holding a certificate should, in principle, be exempted from testing or quarantine when crossing an international border.

Is it the same as the UK’s NHS Covid Pass?

It’s not the same – but both show the same information and aim to make it simple for someone to show their Covid status. The digital NHS Covid Pass can be accessed via the existing NHS app.

Proof for above 16 years

For people aged 16 and over in England, it shows proof of:

  • vaccination.
  • a negative PCR or lateral flow test in the past 48 hours.
  • recovery from Covid-19.

A paper version confirming that you have been double-vaccinated can be requested online or by calling 119. Paper versions are available for people in Scotland, Wales and, from early to mid-July, Northern Ireland.

Will the EU recognise the NHS Covid Pass?

Not yet – but some individual countries, such as Greece and Spain, are already accepting it.

UK gives priority to free and open travel

The EU says it’s working to ensure its digital certificate is compatible with similar products in non-EU countries. If it’s satisfied a non-EU certificate complies with EU “standards and systems”, it can decide to accept it across all 27 nations. 

“We are engaging the European Commission on reopening travel routes from the UK,” an official said.

If you are an EU national who was vaccinated in the UK, it is up to your home country whether you are eligible for the EU certificate.

Which vaccine matters

It shouldn’t. The four vaccines approved for use in the UK are also approved in the European Union – but three of them are sometimes known by different brand names.

In the EU:

  • the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine is sometimes known as Community.
  • Oxford-AstraZeneca (AZ) is also known as Vaxzevria.
  • Moderna is also known as Spikevax.
  • Janssen (sometimes referred to as the Johnson & Johnson vaccine) is the same as in the UK.

But AZ vaccine doses manufactured by the Serum Institute in India (SII) are also known by a third name – Covishield. And while they are identical to those made in Europe, the EU has not authorised them for use.

Does it matter Covishield is not EU-approved?

Covishield is widely used in poorer countries, via the Covax vaccine programme, and there’s concern the EU passport will discriminate against travellers from those nations.

The European Medicines Agency (EMA) doesn’t need to approve AZ’s manufacturing site in India, because the EU isn’t receiving any doses from there. But the Serum Institute is understood to be seeking emergency EU authorisation for Covishield.

AstraZeneca also says it’s working with the EMA on the “inclusion of Covishield as a recognised vaccine for immunisation passports”.

EMA says no application for market authorisation

While it is not approved for pan-EU use, the World Health Organization has approved it for emergency use – and the European Commission says individual member states may agree to let in travellers fully vaccinated with Covishield.

Countries seek vaccines of developed nations

Greece accepts China’s Sinovac, Russia’s Sputnik V and several others.

Received a Covishield dose in the UK

If you were told you were having an AZ vaccine, it’s possible. Most of the UK’s AZ doses are supplied from plants in North Wales and Staffordshire. But five million Covishield-branded doses were shipped from India as part of the UK’s 100-million-dose AZ order.

The Department of Health won’t comment on individual vaccine supplies, because of commercial and security considerations.

Will it matter if I want to go to the EU?

If you received an AZ vaccination – and go to an EU country that accepts the NHS Covid Pass – your pass should show you received the Vaxzevria vaccine, the EU name for the AstraZeneca jab.

“All AstraZeneca vaccines given in the UK are the same product and appear on the NHS Covid Pass as Vaxzevria,” the Department for Health says.

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Source: BBC