The National - News

DUBAI AIMS TO EXCEED PRE-COVID TOURISM NUMBERS

▶ Emirate recorded a 17% increase in tourist arrivals in first quarter

- SHWETA JAIN and DEENA KAMEL

Dubai aims to exceed the pre-pandemic annual number of internatio­nal visitors this year, after it recorded a 17 per cent increase in tourist numbers in the first quarter of 2023, the emirate’s tourism chief said yesterday.

The emirate hosted 4.67 million overnight visitors in the three months to the end of March, compared with 3.97 million tourists during the same period in 2022, the Dubai’s Department of Economy and Tourism (DET) said. The figure climbed close to the 4.75 million visitors recorded during the first quarter of 2019, before the pandemic.

The latest figures place the emirate on track to become the most visited global destinatio­n, the government body said.

“Our aim is to exceed last year’s number and our aim is to do better than we did in 2019,” Issam Kazim, chief executive of the Dubai Department for Tourism and Commerce Marketing (DTCM), told The National during the Arabian Travel Market in Dubai yesterday.

Dubai recorded 14.36 million internatio­nal visitors in 2022, inching closer to the 16.73 million tourists in 2019, according to DET statistics.

“Once again, Dubai confirms its leading global position as a destinatio­n for tourists and visitors from everywhere … During the first quarter of 2023, we welcomed 4.67 million internatio­nal visitors who enjoyed the best tourism experience­s in the world,” Sheikh Hamdan bin Mohammed, Crown Prince of Dubai, said on Twitter.

“These numbers and the growth in the number of visitors … reflect our ambitions within the D33 agenda.”

Dubai’s tourism sector has strongly rebounded from the coronaviru­s-induced slowdown. Dubai Internatio­nal Airport (DXB) remained the world’s busiest internatio­nal hub for passengers last year for the ninth year in a row, as long-haul travel demand surged, rankings by the Airports Council Internatio­nal showed in April.

Dubai is aiming to exceed its 2019 tourism performanc­e as more Chinese visitors come to the emirate following the Asian country’s re-opening to internatio­nal travel and as global carriers ramp up their capacity to pre-Covid levels, Mr Kazim said.

“With that in mind, getting the 4.67 million tourists gives me comfort to know that at least we can push to reach or exceed the 2019 numbers because that is our target,” Mr Kazim said. The focus is to keep Dubai “top of mind” for travellers so that every airline seat to the emirate is full, he said.

Dubai is continuing with its strategy to diversify its tourism source markets, running more than 80 marketing campaigns in 2022 to countries such as Germany, France and Egypt at a time when its traditiona­l source market of China was still closed for travel.

“We tried different markets and we saw a huge jump in those markets,” Mr Kazim said.

Dubai is also wooing visitors from source markets in CIS countries such as Turkey that could be “potentiall­y big” and can help contribute to tourism growth, he said.

Source markets across Latin America, Africa and Australia also have “major potential”, while the US has “bigger potential” than the current ranking in the top five source markets, he added.

But increasing visitor numbers from each of its source markets also depends on how quickly Dubai airlines can boost their capacity and how soon domestic airlines in those markets can start to operate a new route to Dubai, Mr Kazim said.

The global transit hub is also increasing efforts to promote itself as a stopover destinatio­n for travellers passing through DXB. It is also working on increasing visitors’ length of stay in Dubai and encouragin­g repeat trips, as part of its performanc­e targets.

Dubai’s first-quarter visitor numbers position the emirate as the fastest recovering destinatio­n globally, achieving 98 per cent of pre-pandemic levels during this period, according to the DET report.

Dubai hotels’ average occupancy during the January-March period stood at 83 per cent, close to the 84 per cent occupancy recorded in first quarter of 2019, despite a 26 per cent increase in the number of hotel rooms since.

“Q1 2023 has set us off on a very strong trajectory for the year,” said Helal Almarri, director general of DET.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates