EU ambassadors fulfill on Wednesday to plan resuming external verge on 1 July, and visitors from the US could be among those not allowed in.
A number of European countries are eager to open up to tourists but others are wary of the continued spread of coronavirus.
The 27- member bloc need to first concur the measures that non-EU countries need to meet prior to deciding on a safe list.
The infection is spreading out in the United States, so it is most likely Americans would be disallowed.
Brazil, Russia and other nations with high infection rates would also be left off a safe list, according to reports from Brussels.
The EU is not yet thought to have concurred how they will examine which nations meet health standards – one of the requirements for entry. Part of the issue is assessing trustworthy health data, reports say.
Comparing infection rates with other countries
Latest figures from the EU’s health agency, the European Centre for Illness Prevention and Control, emphasize Brazil, Peru, Chile, Panama and Saudi Arabia as countries with the greatest “case alert rate”.
Russia and the US have a lower rate of cases per 100,000 inhabitants but are still greater than most of Europe. The United States has actually seen 2.3 million infections and 120,000 deaths and cases are climbing in a number of states.
The European Commission is encouraging ambassadors only to think about nations that are equivalent or better than the EU average when it concerns brand-new infections, the pattern in brand-new infections, along with screening and tracing.
Reports said member states were examining 2 various lists. The Politico website stated one covered countries with less than 16 cases per 100,000 people and the other with as much as 20 cases, which would include Canada and Turkey. The New York Times said the list would be revised every two weeks, so the United States could be added later.
Other requirements also being thought about are reciprocity and links to the EU. France wants the EU to give access only when it