European Parliament and Member States Reached Deal on Covid-19 Digital Certificates

The European Parliament and the member states reached a provisional deal on Thursday (20 May) on COVID-19 certificates designed to facilitate travel and help revive tourism in Europe.

Once the political compromise on the EU digital COVID certificate, previously known as the European digital green certificate, is approved by the Parliament and by the Council representing the 27 EU countries, it will come into force on 1 July.

The agreed text will be put to the Parliament's Civil Liberties Committee (LIBE) on 26 May. If confirmed, it will be tabled for adoption during Parliament's plenary session on 7-10 June. In parallel, the Council will have to confirm the agreement as well.

"This will obviously will mark summer 2021. […] We won't be repeating the nightmare of summer 2020," Parliament's rapporteur, Spanish lawmaker Juan Fernando Lopez Aguilar, told a press conference on Thursday evening, after the negotiations were finalised.  Lopez Aguilar is the chair of the LIBE committee.

The EU digital Covid Certificate, which may be in digital format as a QR code, or on paper, will attest that a person has been vaccinated against coronavirus, has had a recent negative test result or has recovered from the infection. This will let authorities determine the status of a visitor based on records in their home EU country.

The certificate will not be a precondition to exercise the right to free movement and will not be considered a travel document. The scheme also covers non-EU members of the border-free Schengen zone - Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland.

An agreement for budgetary support was also reached to make tests more affordable for all citizens. The European Commission committed to mobilising "at least €100 million"...

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