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European Commission

government — EU institution

3 items across 3 editions  ·  last active 6 Jul 26

In the brief

No. 6 · Monday, 6 July 2026

Brussels rebuffs airline push to suspend EU border-check system, points to existing flexibility instead

Partnerships & EngagementEuropean Union
What? EU Migration Commissioner Magnus Brunner, replying July 3 to the airline and airport industry's July 1 joint complaint over Entry/Exit System (EES) wait times of up to five hours, said the Commission "will now make additional efforts to help member states that still encounter issues" — but declined to suspend the system, instead pointing to an existing provision letting states suspend biometric data collection at specific crossings through early September, and noting that insufficient staffing and infrastructure, not the system itself, explain some delays. Since the October 2025 launch, 110 million people have used EES with just over 44,000 denied entry. A Commission-industry meeting is set for July 7.
So what? Brussels choosing to defend the system's design over granting the suspension airlines wanted means peak-season congestion at Europe's busiest external-border points is likely to persist through summer rather than ease — expect secondary-screening queues at the largest hub airports to keep squeezing connection windows for onward U.S.-bound travelers and cargo, with the July 7 meeting the next point to watch for any harder concession.
Corroborated · Sources: CTV/CP24 (AFP) · Travel Weekly (July 5, 2026)
No. 5 · Sunday, 5 July 2026

Airline industry asks Brussels to suspend EU border-check system for peak summer travel

Partnerships & EngagementEuropean Union
What? With the EU's Entry/Exit System now live at land, sea, and air borders and producing queues of up to several hours at major hubs, the airline and airport associations Airlines for Europe, ACI Europe, and IATA formally asked the European Commission for "immediate intervention" to let individual airports suspend biometric checks in July and August whenever passenger volumes exceed border-control capacity. European airports are projected to handle roughly 40 million more passengers over the next two months than in May and June combined.
So what? A formal industry request to suspend a mandatory EU security system, rather than just complain about it, signals the delays are now judged operationally unsustainable by the carriers themselves; if Brussels grants even airport-by-airport flexibility it would be the first rollback of EES since launch, and the Commission's response will show how much weight the aviation lobby carries against a flagship border-security program it has otherwise defended as non-negotiable.
Corroborated · Sources: Euronews · CAPA (Centre for Aviation) (July 1, 2026)
No. 4 · Saturday, 4 July 2026

Von der Leyen admits "technical problems" as new EU border-check system triggers hours-long delays

Partnerships & EngagementEuropean Union
What? European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen acknowledged July 3 there is "still quite a lot of work to do" to fix the biometric Entry/Exit System, live since April, which has produced waits of up to five hours at peak periods at high-traffic Schengen airports. European airport and airline trade bodies sent an open letter demanding temporary flexibility through the July-August peak season, and the Financial Times described the rollout as "whack-a-mole."
So what? A visibly strained EU biometric border system heading into peak summer travel is likely to push member states toward ad hoc workarounds that could soften the system's intended screening value before it stabilizes; a firm Commission fix timeline, rather than another round of "more work needed," would be the signal this gets resolved before it becomes the summer's default state.
Corroborated · Sources: The Local · Al Jazeera (July 3, 2026)

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