Mmegi

Readies for tourism P3.5m revamp

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effort to revamp its Presidenti­al and Executives suites at its flagship asset, the Cresta Mowana Hotel, literally spending through the pain as the general industry focussed on survival.

“It would have been more expensive if we did not go ahead because we had already committed,” Mokwena Morulane, Cresta managing director says.

“It was also a demonstrat­ion of our belief in our product and we wanted to show that something like COVID-19 is not permanent.

“As a leader in the hospitalit­y industry, we needed to demonstrat­e that we are not retracting, but have confidence by spending money in areas where we felt it was important to do so.

“We were demonstrat­ing our belief in the tourism product in Chobe and the country as a whole, to put together a product that we can all be proud off.”

Cresta spent against the trend in the tourism industry, with a view to the industry’s recovery and future peak seasons. However, the sacrifice was a tough one. As a group, Cresta posted a P43 million pretax loss for the six-month period ended June 30, a huge fall from a pretax profit of P12.2 million over the correspond­ing period in 2019.

The group cut discretion­ary expenditur­e, renegotiat­ed contractua­l obligation­s with external parties, suspended all project expenditur­e and spoke to its lenders.

The 1,000 or so employees were justifiabl­y as nervous as the rest of their counterpar­ts in the industry.

“We sacrificed as a management team to lead the commitment to cash preservati­on.

“The ExCo team took the first cut in salaries then the next level of management.

“We said we want to protect the workforce.

“Of the 1,000 people employed, 85% of those were protected from any cuts and we are also thankful for government’s support through the wage subsidy.

“As ExCo and management, we went through that for six months and only from October have those cuts been removed because the books improved and we broke even.”

Borders have opened, but internatio­nal tourists have not yet returned in large numbers, as they usually book for the April to September peak tourism period when dry conditions mean wildlife congregate­s at the few water holes and is therefore more visible.

Batswana, meanwhile, are largely festive season travellers and in Kasane, activities are hotting up. The Chobe River is a hive of activity with boats of various sizes docking and taking off into the sunset.

The tourism ecosystem, from consumable­s used at accommodat­ion facilities, to the curious sold, various items rented for safari and boat cruises and the beds sold, is radiating sustainabl­e jobs at the moment.

Everywhere, all over town, the activity is heightenin­g and residents say most top facilities are fully booked into next year.

Morulane is cautiously optimistic. Internatio­nal tourists may not want to go through the hassle of COVID tests and quarantine­s. Travellers are ‘ battle weary’ from the pandemic, nervous about travelling and would rather stay at home. The vaccine news is great, but no one knows when it will reach ‘our’ part of the world.

“However, we will see the return of internatio­nal travellers our way,” the MD says.

“They still need to come and see what we offer here that is not offered anywhere else.

“We have a sense that when the business returns, it will be in a huge and profitable way for us and that day is imminent.

“Even when that day comes, however, local tourism, going into the future, will be a strong feature for both our business and leisure hotels.”

Kasane, meanwhile, is already in bloom and it shows.

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