Mercury (Hobart)

Tourism is open to the world

Big events to boost internatio­nal arrivals

- DAVID MILLS

AUSSIE tourism will get a twin boost in early 2023 with the Australian Open in Melbourne and WorldPride in Sydney, but internatio­nal visitor levels are not expected to pass pre-pandemic levels until 2025, government figures show.

While other economic indicators quickly bounced back after Covid-19, there has been no miracle rebound for internatio­nal tourist numbers, with the most recent ABS data showing Australia had 1.2 million overseas arrivals in November.

In January 2020 there were 2.26 million.

The NSW government is expecting 78,000 tourists from outside Sydney for WorldPride, a kind of mega Mardi Gras in February and March. But it has no estimate as to how many of the tourists will be internatio­nal visitors.

Tennis Australia said its ticket sales for the 2023 Australian Open were similar to 2020, which was a record year for the event. Nine per cent of tickets have been sold to internatio­nal tourists so far, down from 11 per cent in 2020.

Tourism & Transport Forum CEO Margy Osmond said the sluggish return of internatio­nal arrivals was mainly a product of expense and reduced inbound capacity, but there were also other factors at play.

“We’re slam bang in the middle of what is the most competitiv­e tourism market the world has ever seen,” she said.

“Every country in the world is vying for the footloose high-spending traveller. As a consequenc­e it is an incredibly tough market.”

Older people were also still biding their time before travelling internatio­nally again, Ms Osmond said, while a growing cohort were concerned about the sustainabi­lity aspect of travel and the carbon footprint of longhaul flights.

“This is an issue for many travellers in a way that it just wasn’t before the pandemic, and it’s even more trenchant in the business travel space,” she said.

According to Tourism Australia, the number of seats on planes coming into the country in November was

66 per cent of November 2019 levels. That is set to increase, gradually, with the

June 2023 figures forecast to be 83 per cent of what they were in June 2019.

The absence of Chinese tourists is another factor. Formerly our biggest market for internatio­nal arrivals, visitors from China are no longer in our top 10. But the government is forecastin­g a gradual return as relations between Canberra and Beijing begin to thaw.

Federal Tourism Minister Don Farrell said arrivals from China were “expected to return to prominence” between now and 2027.

A total of 3.5 million internatio­nal visitors were forecast to arrive in Australia this year, rising to 9.5 million in 2025 and 11 million in 2027, Senator Farrell said.

Arrival numbers should exceed pre-pandemic levels by 2025, he added.

Sydney WorldPride chief executive Kate Wickett said more than 500,000 people were expected to participat­e in the festival’s free and ticketed events, including a concert headlined by Kylie Minogue and an early morning march over the Sydney Harbour Bridge.

“Mardi Gras always brings people from around Australia and across the world to Sydney … and Sydney WorldPride is also a 17-day festival, so we’re expecting tourists will stay longer than they do in a normal Mardi Gras year,” Ms Wickett

said.

North Americans were “by far” the No.1 internatio­nal ticket buyers for WorldPride events, she said. Victoria is also hoping to grab its share of internatio­nal WorldPride visitors, with its own LGBTQIA+ celebratio­n Midsumma taking place beforehand, and the ChillOut queer culture festival to be held in regional Daylesford afterwards.

“With a spectacula­r offering of major events, worldclass cultural institutio­ns, bustling night-life and an enviable reputation as Australia’s capital of cool, Melbourne welcomes the world’s LGBTQIA+ community with open arms,” Victorian Tourism Minister Steve Dimopoulos said.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? The world-renowned Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is uniting with Sydney WorldPride for the biggest night on the LGBTQIA+ calendar.Picture: Jeffrey Feng
The world-renowned Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras is uniting with Sydney WorldPride for the biggest night on the LGBTQIA+ calendar.Picture: Jeffrey Feng
 ?? ?? From left: Rafael Nadal, Kylie Minogue, fans at the Australian Open, Margy Osmond.
From left: Rafael Nadal, Kylie Minogue, fans at the Australian Open, Margy Osmond.
 ?? ?? Kate Wickett
Kate Wickett
 ?? ?? Don Farrell
Don Farrell

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia