Short trips, local travel during festival holidays save China's tourism market
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Short trips, local travel during festival holidays save China's tourism market

Visitors enter the Universal Beijing Resort in Beijing on Sept 20, 2021 as the Universal Studios theme park opens to the general public. (Reuters photo)
Visitors enter the Universal Beijing Resort in Beijing on Sept 20, 2021 as the Universal Studios theme park opens to the general public. (Reuters photo)

HONG KONG: Short trips and local travel have mitigated losses in China's tourism market after fresh coronavirus outbreaks caused a flood of cancellations ahead of Mid-Autumn Festival holidays, as resilient travellers opted for trips closer to home instead of between provinces, new data shows.

Despite a Delta variant outbreak in Fujian province crushing many people's travel plans just days before the three-day holiday began on Sept 19, turnover was not drastically below pre-pandemic numbers even amid official recommendations against travel.

Some 88.2 million travellers - about 87.2% of the volume in the same period of 2019 - spent 37.1 billion yuan (193 billion baht) over the break, according to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. Spending was about 78.6% of the same period two years ago.

Data from online travel agency ctrip.com showed 56% of the tours booked were short-distance trips. Online travel agency LY.com said bookings grew compared to the same period in 2019.

Beijing was a stand-out performer thanks to the newly-opened Universal Studios, as well as its concentration of internationally recognised cultural sites.

A total of 220 tourist sites, excluding the Universal theme park, handled more than 3 million visitors and created more than 285 million yuan in revenue, a 64.5% increase on the 2019 holiday period, the Beijing Municipal Bureau of Tourism and Culture said.

With residents unable to travel abroad or in many cases even out of the city, bed and breakfasts, known locally as Minsu, located in the Beijing suburbs were a popular getaway option.

Cao Qiang, who runs four bed and breakfasts in the capital, said they were all booked over the Mid-Autumn Festival holiday, as well as for the National Day holiday on Friday.

"They are more popular than before the pandemic," said Cao. "But in the past, people would book three or four weeks in advance, now there are still rooms available one or two weeks before the holidays."

Elsewhere in the country, local tourism was also strong over the holiday period. Some 70% of tourists in the scenic city of Hangzhou were from within Zhejiang province, while other travellers were mainly from adjacent provinces, according to the Hangzhou Culture and Tourism Development Centre.

An average tourist in Hangzhou spent 3,189 yuan using payment cards during the holiday, a 10.7% increase from the same period in 2019, official tourism data showed.

While local tourism saved the day in big cities, travel agencies, airlines and railway services that rely on longer trips did not fare as well.

Liu Jianbin, CEO of Shangchuanba, a premium travel agency, said the high-end travellers he caters for travelled "less than expected", with only one of the three routes his company offered fully booked.

Chen Xia, the manager of a travel agency in Chongqing city, one of China's most popular destinations for the Mid-Autumn Festival, said there were not many interprovincial travellers.

"It inevitably influenced our businesses," she said.

During the five-day Labour Day holiday in May, domestic airports handled about 67,800 flights, with an average of 13,500 a day, according to flight data service Variflight.com. Over the three-day Mid-Autumn holiday, only about 28,300 flights took off, fewer than 10,000 a day on average.

Some airlines had 30% of their flights over the Mid-Autumn holiday cancelled, according to business publication 21jingji.com

China Railway handled about 35 million passengers, with peak daily passenger numbers on Sept 19 still 30 % lower than the same time last year, and the lowest since 2017.

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