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COVID-19

Why is Norway tougher than Denmark on travel to Sweden?

Norway is currently only allowing travel to seven Swedish regions. For Denmark, 12 regions in Sweden are open.

Why is Norway tougher than Denmark on travel to Sweden?
Customs officers and policemen check car drivers at the border between Norway and Sweden in Swinesund on March 16th. Photo: AFP

Norway's health authorities judge countries – or regions, in the case of fellow Nordic countries – as 'green' if the rate of new coronavirus infections is less than 20 cases per 100,000 people, meaning Norwegian residents can travel there.

Countries or Nordic regions which do not meet this criterion are classed as 'red', meaning the Ministry of Foreign Affairs advises against travel that is not strictly necessary to these countries, and self-quarantine is required for travellers returning or arriving from them. This also means people cannot travel from 'red' regions to Norway for tourism.

Denmark operates a similar system of using the rate of infection per 100,000 people to determine whether or not to advise travel, but the criteria are applied slightly differently.

As a result, as of July 27th Denmark allows travel to and from 12 Swedish regions or län: Blekinge, Halland, Jämtland, Härjedalen, Kalmar, Kronoberg, Skåne, Sörmland, Uppsala, Värmland, Västerbotten, Örebro and Östergötland.

Norway, meanwhile, accepts travel to and from seven län: Blekinge, Kalmar, Kronoberg, Skåne, Värmland, Örebro and Östergötland.

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The relative health authorities from the respective countries, the Norwegian Institute of Public Health (NIPH) and Denmark’s infectious disease institute SSI, met earlier this year to discuss common criteria for Nordic travel and agreed on the limit of 20 cases per 100,000 people.

But the limit is applied differently by each country after a unilateral Norwegian decision to tighten its requirement, VG writes.

In order for Norway to allow travel to a Swedish region, that region must have registered fewer than 20 coronavirus infections per 100,000 residents in total over the past two weeks.

According to the original limit agreed with Denmark, the infection criterion is 20 per 100,000 residents on average.

This means that the number of new infections over a two-week period will give a different value for the criteria used by Norway (two-week running total) and Denmark (average of last two weeks).

Norway decided to make its requirement stricter when it began to allow tourism to Europe from July 10th, meaning that a stricter demand was placed on allowing travel outside of the Nordic countries, but also applied to the Nordic countries, to where travel was already open.

NIPH advised stricter requirements for the non-Nordic countries, but the government did not want to give those countries more favourable conditions and decided on a blanket application of the stricter criteria, according to NRK’s report.

“The government concluded that the criterion for all new cases should be the same for Scandinavia and the rest of the EEA/Schengen area. It was therefore changed to ’20 new cases per 100,000 residents in the last two weeks’, as the FHI and Norwegian Directorate of Health had proposed for the EEA/Schengen area,” Anne Grethe Erlandsen, State Secretary at the Ministry of Health and Care Services, told VG via email.

Denmark meanwhile chose to apply the less strict interpretation to the Nordic region and European countries alike.

Norway is currently imposing a quarantine requirement on travellers arriving from Spain, a country still considered ‘open’ by Danish authorities at the time of writing.

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TRAVEL NEWS

US to end Covid testing requirement for travellers from Europe

Authorities in the USA have announced the end of the Covid-testing requirement for arrivals from Europe, meaning that fully vaccinated people will soon be able to travel between Europe and the US without needing pre-travel tests.

US to end Covid testing requirement for travellers from Europe

Most of Europe had dropped the testing requirement for fully-vaccinated arrivals in the spring, but the US has maintained the requirement to show proof of a negative test for all arrivals.

However on Friday, the Biden administration announced that it would not renew the testing requirement.

The new rule is expected to come into effect at 12.01 Sunday EDT, until then passengers will still need to show a negative Covid test before they can board a plane to the US.

The US currently bars unvaccinated travellers from entry – although this does not apply to US citizens, US residents or those travelling for essential reasons – there was no announcement on lifting this restriction. 

The CDC said that testing requirements could be reinstated if new variants of Covid emerge, and added that it continues to recommend pre-travel testing. 

Covid travel rules vary between individual countries in Europe, but most countries now only require pre-departure tests for unvaccinated travellers. Check the rules of the country you are travelling to for full details. 

To be counted as ‘fully vaccinated’ travellers must have received both doses of an EMA-approved vaccine – Pfizer, Moderna, AstraZeneca (or a single dose of Janssen).

If their vaccination was more than nine months ago, they need a booster shot in order to be considered fully vaccinated – people who have had a booster do not need a second, even if their booster shot was more than nine months ago.

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