Bangkok Post

Govt to aid bushfire-hit tourism sector

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MELBOURNE: The Australian government said yesterday it will provide financial aid to the country’s tourism sector that’s been badly hit by longlastin­g bushfires, as business owners fretted about cancellati­ons that stretch into the months ahead.

Although recent rains have brought some relief, damage to the industry from the fires has approached A$1 billion (20.9 billion baht) so far and may top $4.5 billion by the end of the year, according to estimates from Australian tourism bodies.

“People have stopped coming,” said Tony Coppins, owner of Kangaroo Island Safari and Kangaroo Island Ocean Safari, adding that he had received cancellati­ons for February and March.

“They think the whole island is on fire and it’s not, so we really need to send that message out that the island is still accessible.”

A fire earlier this month scorched more than 200,000 hectares on the island, located off the coast of South Australia, in blazes described as “hell on earth”.

The government said yesterday it would channel $76 million in what it described as an initial push to help the country’s $152 billion tourism industry, which accounts for more than 3% of annual economic output.

“Internatio­nal visitors are critical and especially critical in places like Kangaroo Island or tropical North Queensland and these are destinatio­ns that have relied upon a large part of their visitor market being internatio­nal tourists and that’s why we got to recover those markets as quickly as we can,” said Tourism Minister Simon Birmingham.

Birmingham said bookings from key internatio­nal markets to Australia were down by between 30% and 40%. Domestic bookings across the country were down nearly 70%, Australian media reported.

Rains have brought the number of fires burning across Australia’s east and south coast to under 100 for the first time in weeks, easing a disaster that has scorched an area roughly one-third the size of Germany.

Twenty nine people have been killed in the fires so far while millions of animals are also estimated to have perished.

In Melbourne, fears receded that smoke from the fires would disrupt the Australian Open which starts today as the city and parts of the bushfirera­vaged state of Victoria braced for heavy rains.

“Victoria is about to see its wettest two-day period in many, many months,” said Dean Narramore from the state’s Bureau of Meteorolog­y.

More than 780,000 fans attended the two-week Australian Open last year, according to figures from the office of the state’s premier, providing a major influx of cash for Victoria’s economy.

 ?? AFP ?? Rural Fire Service volunteer firefighte­rs look on as the New South Wales ‘mega-fire’ approaches Tumbarumba, New South Wales last week.
AFP Rural Fire Service volunteer firefighte­rs look on as the New South Wales ‘mega-fire’ approaches Tumbarumba, New South Wales last week.

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