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Glastonbury Canceled Again, Casting Doubt Over Europe’s Music Festivals

Britain’s biggest music event won’t take place for a second year in a row. The decision has sent shock waves across Europe, where festivals have already been asking politicians for help.

Kylie Minogue performs at Glastonbury Festival in 2019, the last time the event took place. Credit...Oli Scarff/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

LONDON — Britain’s Glastonbury festival, one of the world’s most prominent pop music events, was canceled on Thursday for a second year in a row because of the coronavirus — sparking fear that large music festivals in Europe will not go ahead this summer.

“In spite of our efforts to move heaven and earth, it has become clear that we simply will not be able to make the festival happen,” Michael and Emily Eavis, the festival’s organizers, said in a joint statement on Thursday. “We are so sorry to let you all down.”

Glastonbury is Britain’s largest pop event, held each June at the Eavis’s farm in Pilton, southwest England. About 210,000 people would have attended this year, camping at the site for several days. (The farm’s cows are moved off site for the festival.)

The announcement came as coronavirus deaths are soaring in England, which is in its third national lockdown. Some 1,820 daily deaths were announced on Wednesday. On Thursday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson told reporters it was “too early” to say when lockdown restrictions would be eased.

For weeks, Glastonbury’s organizers had been warning that the festival was at risk of cancellation because of uncertainties around the pandemic, with insurers unwilling to provide cover. In December, Emily Eavis did a string of interviews with British news organizations in which she asked the government to create its own insurance scheme to cover costs if a last-minute cancellation became necessary.

“What we definitely can’t afford to risk is getting too far into the process of next year, only for it to be snatched away from us,” she told the BBC.

Oliver Dowden, Britain’s culture minister, said in a tweet on Thursday that Glastonbury’s decision was understandable as bringing fans together “in just a few months looks very difficult to make safe.” The government was “looking at problems around getting insurance,” he added.

This month, Austria launched an insurance scheme to cover events that cannot be rescheduled, including music festivals. Germany’s finance ministry recently said it has plans to start covering cultural events, but Britain only has a similar scheme for film and TV shoots despite pressure from politicians and musicians.

The decision to cancel Glastonbury again has caused concern across Europe, where music festivals have an almost mythical status. British politicians often like to be seen at Glastonbury, a sign of its importance in the cultural calendar.

“It’s sent a very bad signal,” Olivier Garnier, a spokesman for Hellfest, one of France’s largest events, said in a telephone interview. Hellfest hosts about 60,000 heavy metal fans each year and its 2021 iteration, scheduled for June, is already sold out.

On Monday, Hellfest sent a three-page letter to Roselyne Bachelot, France’s culture minister, asking for certainty on whether the event can occur, and suggesting that the festival could test attendees for the virus upon arrival.

On Tuesday, Bachelot dismissed the idea that testing would be enough to allow festivals to occur. “It’s fanciful!’,” she told a French parliamentary committee, adding that festivals were an obvious potential site of transmission with people singing, drinking and dancing together.

The picture is not entirely downbeat across the continent. In Denmark, festivals are preparing to go ahead, said Esben Marcher of Dansk Live, a body that represents festival organizers, in a telephone interview.

“Of course Glastonbury’s news is a big signal to the rest of Europe,” he said, “but my sense is that building its site is a much larger and longer process than for others.” Glastonbury takes months to prepare its fields to stage the event, Marcher said. Danish events could be set up in a few weeks.

In December, Roskilde, Denmark’s biggest festival scheduled for June, announced the rapper Kendrick Lamar as a headliner. Signe Lopdrup, Roskilde’s chief executive, said in an email that she was “cautiously optimistic” about it going ahead.

Marcher said he’d had “good discussions” with Denmark’s culture ministry about “how festivals can proceed” and hoped for an insurance scheme similar to those in other countries.

Festival organizers are also pushing for the creation of a digital passport that would allow people to attend events if they have been vaccinated, have Covid-19 antibodies or have tested negative for the virus within 72 hours of an event, he added. But Marcher said politicians had been reluctant to discuss that proposal at a time when Denmark is experiencing a surge in coronavirus cases. “No one wants to talk about how to open up society, when we’re still closing it down,” he added.

Several other major European festivals, including Primavera Sound, held in Barcelona, said in emails they did not want to comment on Glastonbury’s move.

On Thursday, the organizers of Belgium’s Dour festival, scheduled to be headlined in July by ASAP Rocky, said in an email they were surprised by Glastonbury, but “stay confident” about their festival.

Even if some European festivals do go ahead this year, and get government support, it is too late for Glastonbury. The festival will have to take “an enforced fallow year,” the Eavises said in their statement. The main sounds on their farm this June will have to come from the cows.

Constant Méheut contributed reporting from Paris.

Alex Marshall is a European culture reporter, based in London. More about Alex Marshall

A version of this article appears in print on  , Section C, Page 3 of the New York edition with the headline: Covid Halts Glastonbury For a Second Straight Year. Order Reprints | Today’s Paper | Subscribe

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