Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Around the globe, covid restricts spring travel

- DAVID MCHUGH, CASEY SMITH AND JOE MCDONALD Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Elaine Kurtenbach and Costas Kantouris of The Associated Press.

FRANKFURT, Germany — They are the annual journeys of late winter and early spring: Factory workers in China heading home for the Lunar New Year; American college students going on road trips and hitting the beach over spring break; Germans and Britons fleeing drab skies for some Mediterran­ean sun over Easter.

All of it canceled, in doubt or under pressure because of the coronaviru­s.

Amid fears of new variants of the virus, new restrictio­ns on movement have hit just as people start to look ahead to what is usually a busy time of year for travel.

It means more pain for airlines, hotels, restaurant­s and tourist destinatio­ns that were already struggling more than a year into the pandemic, and a slower recovery for countries where tourism is a big chunk of the economy.

Colleges around the U.S. have been canceling spring break to discourage students from traveling. After Indiana University in Bloomingto­n replaced its usual break with three “wellness days,” student Jacki Sylvester abandoned plans to celebrate her 21st birthday in Las Vegas.

Instead she will mark the milestone closer to home, with a day at the casino in French Lick, Ind., just 50 miles away.

“I was really looking forward to getting out of here for a whole week. I wanted to be able to get some drinks and have fun — see the casinos and everything — and honestly see another city and just travel a little,” she said.

“At least it’s letting us have a little fun for a day in a condensed version of our original Vegas plans. Like, I’m still going to be able to celebrate. … I’m just forced to do it closer to home.”

Flight cancellati­ons will keep Anthony Hoarty, a teacher from Cranfield in England, from spending Easter with his family at their bungalow on the Greek island of Crete, a trip already postponed from October. A trip to Mauritius last Easter also fell victim to covid-19. “It’s the uncertaint­y,” he said. “You can’t plan things. It’s not knowing if the government is going to change its mind, if the other countries in Europe are changing their mind about travel.”

“I love going to our house — I’d walk if I could,” he said.

They could holiday in Britain but with most people grounded, places may be booked up or expensive: “The chances of us doing anything are pretty remote, actually.”

At bus and train stations in China, there is no sign of the annual Lunar New Year rush. The government has called on the public to avoid travel after new coronaviru­s outbreaks. Only five of 15 security gates at Beijing’s cavernous central railway station were open; the crowds of travelers who usually camp on the sprawling plaza outside were absent.

The holiday, which starts Friday, is usually the world’s single biggest movement of humanity as hundreds of millions of Chinese leave cities to visit their hometowns or tourist spots or travel abroad. For millions of migrant workers, it usually is the only chance to visit their hometowns during the year. This year, authoritie­s are promising extra pay if they stay put.

The government says people will make 1.7 billion trips during the holiday, but that is down 40% from 2019.

U.S. President Joe Biden reinstitut­ed restrictio­ns on travelers from more than two dozen European countries, South Africa and Brazil, while people leaving the U.S. are now required to show a negative test before returning.

Canada barred flights to the Caribbean. Israel closed its main internatio­nal airport. Travel into the European Union is severely restricted, with entry bans and quarantine requiremen­ts for returning citizens.

For air travel, “the shortterm outlook has definitely darkened,” said Brian Pearce, chief economist for the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n. Government­s have poured $200 billion into propping up the industry.

The United Nations World Tourism Organizati­on says internatio­nal arrivals fell 74% last year, wiping out $1.3 trillion in revenue and putting up to 120 million jobs at risk. An organizati­on expert panel had a mixed outlook for 2021, with 45% expecting a better year, 25% expecting no change and 30% expecting a worse one.

In Europe the outlook is clouded by lagging vaccine rollouts and the spread of the new variants.

That means “there is a growing risk of another summer tourist season being lost” said Jack Allen-Reynolds at Capital Economics. “That would put a huge dent in the Greek economy and substantia­lly delay the recoveries in Spain and Portugal.”

Gerasimos Bakogianni­s, owner of the Portes Palace hotel in Potidaia in Greece’s northern Halkidiki region, said he is not even opening for Western Easter on April 4 but will wait a month for Greek Orthodox Easter on May 2 — and, he hopes, the start of a better summer.

“If this year is like last year, tourism will be destroyed,” he said.

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