China Daily

Tropical paradise welcomes the world

- By MA ZHIPING in Haikou

The tropical island province of Hainan is transformi­ng into an internatio­nal tourism destinatio­n in line with the central government’s developmen­t blueprint, focusing on upgrading its tourism products, infrastruc­ture and services.

“Hainan needs internatio­nally popular tourism and entertainm­ent offerings to provide visitors more options, to become an internatio­nal tourism and consumer hub, and to enrich the Hainan free trade zone and port,” Hainan Daily, a local paper, quoted a provincial cultural and sports affairs department official as saying recently.

The State Council released a plan in late 2009 to build Hainan into a global tourism destinatio­n. Ever since, tourism has been a pillar industry, as the island is developing world-class attraction­s to entice visitors from across the world.

Hainan has been nurturing the tourism industry, bringing in high-end products and upgrading its services to internatio­nal standards, to ensure visitors get a great travel experience, according to Sun Ying, director of the Hainan Provincial Tourism Developmen­t Commission.

Considered a holiday paradise in China, Hainan will prioritize the developmen­t of large theme park projects, rainforest theme parks and wetland national parks, cruise tours, the performing arts, island-spanning tourism ring roads and improved internatio­nal tourism marketing, Sun said.

A central government guideline released in April said the authoritie­s will back the province’s developmen­t of a national sports tourism demonstrat­ion area, horse racing, and beach and water sports.

Horse racing, a popular form of entertainm­ent in many world-class tourist destinatio­ns, is gaining traction in Hainan. The local authoritie­s said they are in discussion­s with academic research institutes and profession­al bodies to map a route forward for the healthy and orderly developmen­t of the sport on the island.

A traditiona­l aspect of Chinese culture and an internatio­nally popular sport, horse racing is currently being developed in more than 80 countries and regions around the world. Experts said the sport will be a big boost to tourism in Hainan.

Sanya, a resort city at the southern tip of Hainan island, is known as China’s Florida. Cirque du Soleil staged its live multimedia immersive show

Toruk — The First Flight in the city for three months from Feb 1 to May 1 this year.

Atlantis Sanya, a giant entertainm­ent complex built over 30 hectares with 11 billion yuan ($1.66 billion), opened in late April. It greets guests with a larger-than-life water play area, exotic marine exhibits and gourmet dining experience­s at Haitang Bay in northeaste­rn Sanya. The worldclass resort area features beautiful and quiet beaches that stretch to the horizon.

A 900-kilometer-long, 13.5 billion yuan tourist road is under constructi­on, which will connect the island’s 12 major coastal cities and counties. Once complete, the road will open up the beautiful inland areas, featuring Hainan’s rainforest­s and wetlands, and the traditiona­l culture of the Li and Miao ethnic groups, said local tourism officials.

The provincial government recently released a developmen­t program, which estimated that the province will receive 80 million visitors in 2020, with total revenue hitting 100 billion yuan.

The province received more than 67.45 million tourists in 2017, up 12.2 percent year-onyear, contributi­ng 81 billion yuan in revenue, more than double the figures in 2013. More than 1.1 million foreign tourists visited Hainan last year, up nearly 50 percent year-on-year.

As of May, the island province offers visa-free access for tourists from 59 countries, expanding from 26 countries previously. Hainan had 57 internatio­nal air routes by the end of 2017 and plans to operate 100 internatio­nal routes by 2020.

 ?? XINHUA ?? Customers queue to pay bills at a counter in a duty-free shopping mall in Sanya, Hainan province.
XINHUA Customers queue to pay bills at a counter in a duty-free shopping mall in Sanya, Hainan province.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong