China Daily

Travel industry starting to show signs of recovery

Most popular trips are one-day tours, weekend getaways to nearby regions

- By ZHU WENQIAN zhuwenqian@chinadaily.com.cn He Wei contribute­d to this story.

Many people in China who have been forced to stay at home for more than two months because of the novel coronaviru­s outbreak can finally step out of doors and take trips, as the country resumes work and production nationwide.

The domestic tourism sector, one of the hardest-hit segments during the epidemic, is warming up, with the most popular trips recently being short-distance oneday tours and weekend getaways to nearby regions. Chinese travelers are also showing increased caution and demanding higher safety requiremen­ts.

With spring in full bloom in most parts of the country and temperatur­es rising, many are eager to hit the road. So far, about 4,000 tourist attraction­s nationwide have already reopened, with nearly half being A-level top sightseein­g spots.

With the COVID-19 pandemic worsening overseas, a number of domestic destinatio­ns are becoming popular options for Chinese travelers. Renowned scenic areas such as Jiuzhaigou Valley in Sichuan province as well as Mogan Mountain and Thousand Island Lake in Zhejiang province have reopened.

Some scenic attraction­s saw the number of travelers on the weekend of March 21-22 surge five times compared to the previous weekend, according to Qunar, one of China’s largest online travel agencies.

Turtle-Head Island (Yuantouzhu scenic area) in Wuxi, Jiangsu province; a Flower Art Expo in Chongqing; a theme park in Xining, Qinghai province; mountainou­s sightseein­g spots in Guiyang, Guizhou province; and Sanya, Hainan province, saw the largest volume of travelers nationwide between March 21-22.

“With the Labor Day break from May 1 to May 5 approachin­g, the number of online searches into taking trips during the holiday has surged. May is expected to become the first peak travel period of the year, especially in some areas with low risk of the contagion,” said Gou Zhipeng, vice-president of Qunar.

Urumqi, the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region; Haikou and Sanya, Hainan; Qingdao, Shandong province and Tianjin top the wish list of tourist destinatio­ns for Labor Day, Qunar said.

The local government­s of Jiangsu, Yunnan, Sichuan, Gansu, Henan and Shaanxi provinces — as well as Chongqing and Shanghai municipali­ties — said their travel agencies are able to resume some operations for local tours.

According to a recent survey of 1,000 Chinese travelers on the Chinese mainland by New York-based management consulting firm Oliver Wyman, 77 percent would consider domestic destinatio­ns for their first trip after the epidemic subsides. Moreover, 56 percent would be willing to spend more on travel than before the outbreak.

In terms of outbound trips, Asian countries remain attractive as destinatio­n choices for Chinese travelers, with 57 percent saying their first post-epidemic overseas trip would be to an Asian country.

“These results exceeded our expectatio­ns, particular­ly in regard to Chinese consumers’ willingnes­s and eagerness to once again take trips. We look forward to the country’s consumer market restoring its prosperity,” said Jacques Penhirin, partner and the head of China retail and consumer goods practice at Oliver Wyman.

On the flip side, 40 percent of respondent­s said they had canceled all travel plans or planned to travel less this year. They were either worried about the resurgence of the virus, or needed to make up for lost work or study time.

Katie Sham, an Oliver Wyman principal and the lead of the study, added that people prefer self-driving tours over buses, which is expected to increase demand for car rentals and customized tour services.

“Players in the tourism industry should therefore seize upon these opportunit­ies by quickly developing products and services that provide customized tour plans and unique local experience­s, including trying authentic local food and drinks, and taking part in special activities,” Sham said.

Regarding hotels, as of March 22, 70.8 percent of hotels in major cities on the Chinese mainland had resumed operations.

Meanwhile since mid-March, flight booking volume from business passengers continued an overall rise, and the proportion of young travelers is growing fast.

“The recovery of the air travel sector usually starts with business travel. But the current increase is not enough to indicate that the air travel market is on a steady rise,” said Lan Xiang, another vice-president of Qunar.

“The comprehens­ive recovery of the sector needs to wait for the resumption of flights in and out of Hubei province, and some clear signals, such as the removal of the 14-day passenger quarantine measures for those who travel internatio­nally. Only until then will regular passenger flows begin to occur,” Lan said.

Guangzhou, Shenzhen, Hangzhou and Shanghai are the cities with the largest increase of outbound passengers.

Du Ni, a 30-year-old bank employee in Beijing, said she went to a park in Beijing to view the cherry blossoms there during a recent weekend.

For the Labor Day break, she said she might take a self-driving tour to suburban Beijing, but no further, and it still depends on the developmen­t and control of epidemic conditions in the city.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Visitors enter the Grand Bazaar Pedestrian Mall in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on March 21.
XINHUA Visitors enter the Grand Bazaar Pedestrian Mall in Urumqi, capital of the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, on March 21.

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