Qatar has relaxed some of its restrictions on mobility following a sharp downturn in the number of daily Covid-19 cases since the middle of January.
As of 29 January, schools and kindergartens have transitioned from online to in-person teaching. Public transport is now allowed to operate at 75pc capacity, up from 60pc before, while shopping malls can now operate at full capacity and food halls at 50pc capacity, as opposed to 75pc and 30pc capacity respectively before. Outdoor dining is now allowed at full capacity, versus 75pc before, while indoor dining can operate at 75pc capacity, up from 50pc before.
Some restrictions on social gatherings, cultural events and visiting entertainment places remain unchanged, but the easing of the curbs on mobility should provide at least a modest boost to transport fuel demand in the country.
These latest changes come around three weeks after reintroduced varying levels of restrictions in an effort to stem a surge in coronavirus cases in early January. Qatar's daily Covid-19 cases have risen to an average of 2,950 in January so far, up from an average 228 in December. But cases have been falling since the middle of this month, with the number of active Covid-19 cases falling to 26,248 on 29 January, sharply down from a peak of 42,324 on 19 January. This latest Covid-19 wave, Qatar's worst since the start of the pandemic in March 2020, was likely prompted by the new and more contagious Omicron variant which emerged late last year.

