in
Cardiff on the afternoon of Saturday, 28 March 2020 , afternoon of 28 March 2020 Following the late March introduction of lockdown restrictions, UK road traffic volumes dropped to levels last experienced in the 1950s, with corresponding falls in air and noise pollution. In May, as lockdown road traffic levels slowly grew, but remained around 35% to 45% of usual levels, the AA said volumes were similar to those of the early 1970s. In April 2020, petrol prices fell below £1/litre at some outlets. When Morrison's supermarket chain became the first national retailer of petrol in the UK to sell petrol at under £1 a litre, it was the first time since February 2016.
Aviation From the latter half of January,
Heathrow Airport received additional clinical support and tightened surveillance of the three direct flights it receives from Wuhan every week; each were to be met by a Port Health team. Later, airlines including
British Airways and
Ryanair announced a number of flight cancellations for March. Regional airline
Flybe, already struggling financially, entered
administration and ceased operations the following day. Having already put some 23,000 workers on furlough, on 28 April British Airways' parent IAG announced a restructuring and redundancy programme potentially resulting in 12,000 BA job redundancies.
EasyJet laid off 4,000 UK-based cabin crew for two months. On 25 March,
London City Airport temporarily closed. Heathrow Airport closed one runway from 6April, while Gatwick Airport closed one terminal and reduced runway hours. Most other UK airports also significantly scaled back operations and put airport expansion plans on hold. In May, a 14-day mandatory quarantine period for anyone arriving from outside the UK or Ireland was announced, which was criticised by Airlines UK. This excluded those travelling from the
Channel Islands,
Isle of Man, Ireland and selected occupations. If a person arrived and did not have a place to isolate then they would be asked to go into Government accommodation, which they would have to pay for. Each nation could decide how they would enforce the new rules. On 3 July, the British Government published a full list of countries where quarantine will not apply These countries include Greece, Spain, France and Belgium, to come into effect from 10 July. Countries such as China, US, Sweden and Portugal are not, meaning arrivals from those have to isolate for 14 days. Scotland and Wales are yet to decide whether to ease travel restrictions and described the changes as "shambolic". The quarantine rules would also remain in place in Northern Ireland for visitors arriving from outside of the UK and Republic of Ireland. On 7 October 2020, a new
Global Travel Taskforce was announced by the
Transport Secretary with the aim of helping international travel return to safe operation. On 17 November,
United Airlines Flight 14 landed at London Heathrow, the first transatlantic flight where all the passengers had been mandatorily tested and found negative for
coronavirus prior to departure at
Newark Airport, New York.
Public transport On 20 March the government announced emergency measures to safeguard the nation's
rail network, with season ticket holders given refunds if
remote working, and
rail franchise agreements nationalised for at least six months to prevent train operating companies from collapsing. From 30 March,
open-access operator Hull Trains suspended all services, with
Grand Central following shortly afterwards.
Govia Thameslink Railway also suspended its
Gatwick Express service. Other operators reduced their timetables. On 19 March, the
Stagecoach Supertram light rail network in Sheffield announced that they would be switching to a modified Sunday service from 23 March until further notice. Local bus operators
First South Yorkshire and
Stagecoach Yorkshire, which operate across the same area, announced that they would also be switching to a reduced timetable from 23 March.
National Express suspended all its long-distance coach services from 6April.
Transport for London (TfL) services were reduced in stages. All
Night Overground and
Night Tube services, as well as all services on the
Waterloo & City line, were suspended from 20 March, and 40 tube stations were closed on the same day. The
Mayor of London and TfL urged people to use public transport only if absolutely essential, so it could be used by critical workers. In April, TfL directed passengers to board buses by the middle or rear doors and not "touch in" to reduce the risks to their drivers, after the deaths of 14 TfL workers including nine drivers. Due to a huge decline in fares income, on 7 May TfL requested £2 billion in state aid to keep services running until September 2020. on 12 May, TfL documents warned it expected to lose £4bn due to the pandemic and said it needed £3.2bn to balance a proposed emergency budget for 2021, having lost 90% of its overall income. Without an agreement with the government, TfL risked insolvency. On 14 May, the UK Government agreed £1.6bn in emergency funding for TfL. In April,
Govia Thameslink Railway re-branded three trains with special liveries to show its support for the NHS and the 200,000 essential workers commuting on GTR's network every week. On 8 May, Transport Secretary
Grant Shapps said that even with all public transport services running as normal across the country, when the two-metre social distancing rules were applied, the network would be a running at 10% of normal capacity. Shapps also said that there had been an increase in walking and cycling, with people on bikes up by 70% in some areas. The
Department for Transport announced plans for improving cycle networks, and said that when lockdown ended, more people would need to walk or cycle to work to ease congestion across transport networks. On 4 June, Shapps announced that passengers and staff on public transport in England would, from 15 June, be required to wear face coverings while travelling, and that anyone failing to do so would be liable to be refused travel or fined. Research from
Transport Focus suggested that passenger compliance would be dependent on being prompted by members of staff. Although implementation was initially to be by changes to the
National Rail Conditions of Travel and the Public Service Vehicles Regulations, the 15 June
Health Protection (Coronavirus, Wearing of Face Coverings on Public Transport) (England) Regulations 2020 were ultimately enacted by Shapps under his emergency powers deriving from the
Public Health (Control of Disease) Act 1984. == Betting shops ==