Airports Council Urges President Biden, Prime Minister Trudeau, and G7 leaders to support the development of interoperable digital health passes at the G7 Summit  

June 10, 2021 Ottawa, ON – Airports Council International – North America (ACI-NA) President and CEO Kevin M. Burke and Canadian Airports Council President Daniel-Robert Gooch recently joined ACI World Director General Luis Felipe de Oliveira in writing U.S. President Joe Biden and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to urge G7 leaders to support the continued development and proliferation of interoperable digital health passes at the G7 Summit, beginning Friday, June 11, which will promote the safe and swift reopening of international borders.

ACI-NA and ACI World are committed to ensuring that, as travel returns, airports are not choked off by long lines and crowds as incoming travelers go through necessary checks of their health status.

“We recognise that as the aviation industry recovers and as our citizens start to travel they will need to be assured of their health and safety throughout their journey. We therefore commit to support the development and introduction of digital health passes such as those being introduced by the European Union and the Blueprint developed by the Good Health Pass Collaborative and to take all possible steps to ensure their interoperability,” Burke, Gooch, and de Oliveira said.

Burke, Gooch, and de Oliveira also noted ACI’s commitment to ensuring “that all qualified travellers are able to satisfy the necessary border requirements with the minimum of restrictions or controls.”

As travel begins to recover and the number of individuals already vaccinated continues to climb across the U.S. and around the world, ACI-NA and ACI World have worked with aviation industry and private sector partners to develop principles and standards for digital health passes. The interoperability of these passes between various countries will allow people to travel more freely across borders, allowing the industry to act as a key driver of global economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

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About the Canadian Airports Council

The Canadian Airports Council (CAC), a division of Airports Council International-North America, is the voice for Canada’s airports community. Its 54 members represent more than 100 airports, including all of the privately operated National Airports System (NAS) airports and many municipal airports.

Canada’s locally managed and not for profit airports are essential community assets.  In 2019, they supported 194,000 direct jobs, contributed $19 billion to GDP and $48 billion in direct economic outputs. They also remitted $6.9 billion in taxes to municipal, provincial and federal governments.

For more information or to obtain a copy of the whitepaper, please contact:

Debra Ward

Canadian Airports Council

613 850 9118

debra.ward@cacairports.ca