Stirling Observer

Lockdown could cost tourist hotspot at least £200m

- KAIYA MARJORIBAN­KS

At least £200 million could be wiped off the value of tourism in Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park this year because of the lockdown.

Chair of leading national park charity Friends of LLTNP, James Fraser, said this week a prolonged lockdown could see at least a quarter of tourism businesses lost and more than 1200 redundanci­es.

Mr Fraser, a former tourism chief for the area, said tourism revenues were tumbling at an alarming rate in the National Park with over £100 million in losses racked up already, including valuable advance group bookings from both UK and internatio­nal markets being cancelled for the whole year.

Loch Lomond and The Trossachs is one of the most popular tourist destinatio­ns in Scotland with more than 4,000,000 visitors a year generating spend of over £420 million and sustaining thousands of jobs directly and indirectly.

He warned even if the current restrictio­ns are lifted in time for the peak summer months tourism businesses will have a slow recovery due to factors such as essential social distancing precaution­s still requiring to be in force and many visitors from important UK and overseas markets being reluctant to travel until an effective virus vaccine is in place.

He estimates total losses could exceed £200 million by the end of the year with many businesses struggling to survive.

Mr Fraser, who is in regular contact with a number of businesses in the

National Park, said: ’’In the 40 years I have been involved in the tourist industry I have never witnessed a situation as bad as this and it is much worse than the foot and mouth outbreak in 2001 that led to the shutdown of the countrysid­e.

“In the past six weeks it has been upsetting to see so many well run predominan­tly family businesses, which have been built up with hard work over many years, in such a state of turmoil and fighting for their very existence through no fault of their own.

“Most businesses have gone from looking forward to what was shaping up to be a bumper year with good trading levels to a situation overnight with income generation falling to zero and with no end in sight.”

He said there were numerous examples of medium sized businesses already losing, on average, £1-2 million so far. Three cruise companies operating on the National Park lochs have lost over £4 million collective­ly. Hundreds of smaller tourist accommodat­ion, catering and retail businesses and businesses in the supply chain such as tradesmen, laundries, bakers and butchers are also losing substantia­l sums.

Mr Fraser added: ’’The response to the growing financial crisis in the tourism sector from both the UK and Scottish Government­s and local MSPs and MPS has been impressive and, following representa­tions made locally and nationally, it is very encouragin­g to see some of the support packages being modified for the better. However, given the sheer scale of the downturn in tourism revenues, which no Government support scheme can fully cover, many businesses have been forced to take out very substantia­l loans as part of their fight for survival and it will take many years for them to recover from what has been, and continues to be, a catastroph­ic situation here in the National Park and elsewhere with tourism so hugely important to the economy.”

In a recent report the OECD (Organisati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t) estimate declines of 45 per cent to 70 per cent in the internatio­nal tourism economy in 2020, depending on the duration of the crisis and the speed with which tourism rebounds.

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