China Daily

Hainan facing tough battle for foreign visitors

- By WANG QIAN and HUANG YIMING in Haikou

China’s effort to build its southernmo­st province into a world-class tourist destinatio­n encountere­d a setback last year when fewer foreigners visited.

The number of foreign visitors to Hainan, China’s most popular island resort, dropped by 7.3 percent year-on-year to 756,400 in 2013.

Lu Zhiyuan, director of the provincial tourism developmen­t commission, blamed fiercer regional competitio­n and airspace restrictio­ns for the decline.

“We need to keep our prices competitiv­e and open more airspace for airlines,” Lu said.

Tourists from Russia, Japan, South Korea and the United States, a key segment of the market, were looking elsewhere.

“Many of our potential foreign visitors choose to go to other Asian destinatio­ns, such as Thailand, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam, where prices are much lower,” Lu said.

“We should monitor our prices to attract global tourists,” Lu said, adding that local tourism authoritie­s are outlining a strategy to attract more foreign visitors.

However, prices are just one factor. The lack of internatio­nal flights to Hainan is another.

Only 8 percent of flights to and from Hainan in 2010 were internatio­nal, according to a World Travel and Tourism Council report in 2011.

Lu agreed that airspace restrictio­ns over Hainan should be further eased for airlines.

Three new air routes to Sanya were opened in January, the Civil Aviation Administra­tion of China said. “It is not enough,” Lu said. Amid growing competitio­n from neighborin­g countries, the effects of the offshore dutyfree policy launched in 2011 and visa-free policy for 26 countries through tour groups in Hainan since 2010 seem to have lost their ability to lure more foreign visitors.

Zhang Huifa, vice-chairman of the China Tourism and Hotel Associatio­n, said declining tourist numbers show Hainan must make greater efforts to attract visitors, and he suggested lifting visa requiremen­ts.

“The 144-hour convenienc­e visa for tour groups to Guangdong should also apply to Hainan, and the requiremen­t for tour groups can be lifted to allow individual tourists,” Zhang said.

Lu said Hainan is improving its tourism environmen­t and building up its reputation in the global market as it tries to become a top global destinatio­n by 2020.

In April, Hainan will host the 2014 World Travel and Tourism Council Global Summit, when hundreds of the world’s top tourism experts and agencies will attend a conference in Sanya.

“It is a good opportunit­y to learn from other countries and introduce Hainan to the world,” Lu said.

Hainan is not the only place facing a fall in tourism.

According to the China National Tourism Administra­tion, foreign visitors decreased 2.5 percent last year to 129 million.

China lost nearly 20 percent of visitors from Kazakhstan and Japan and 10 percent from Russia in 2013.

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