Regina Leader-Post

THAILAND FEELS STRESS OF SUCCESS

Overcrowde­d airports, highways can’t handle influx from China

- NATNICHA CHUWIRUCH

Thailand, land of golden temples, white-sand beaches, smiling hosts. Or of overcrowde­d airports, epic traffic jams and littered seashores.

Facing a deluge of Chinese tourists that has strained its airports beyond capacity, the southeast Asian nation is spending billions to upgrade its infrastruc­ture, open up new islands and cities to travellers, and tone down its image of cheap shopping, hotels and sex that underpinne­d the industry for half a century.

But the change will take years and even then may fail to keep up with soaring visitor numbers that have given the Land of Smiles a reputation for delays, overcrowdi­ng and government crackdowns.

“Our strategy was more for less, not less for more, so we invited a lot of tourists from China,” Suvit Maesincee said in an interview last month, when he was the minister attached to the Prime Minister’s office.

“I think in the near future we need to change from volume to value.”

The military-backed government relies on tourism for 18 per cent of the economy and foreign inflows have made the baht one of the strongest performers in Asia this year, a bright spot amid weak domestic consumer demand and private investment. While it plans to spend more than $5 billion to double capacity at its internatio­nal airports, it’s planning to increase foreign tourist numbers at a similar pace, reaching 68 million in the next decade.

Weerasak Kowsurat, who returned to the post of tourism minister in November in a cabinet reshuffle by the military government, is frank about the challenge: “Today we’re not even ready,” he said after a press briefing in Bangkok on Dec. 1.

“To get us prepared within a year is not even possible.”

At the heart of the upgrade, and the congestion, are Bangkok’s two internatio­nal airports: Suvarnabhu­mi and Don Mueang, which are running at 40 per cent beyond designed capacity. New terminals, facilities and another runway would allow them to handle 130 million passengers a year, including inbound and outbound trips.

But work won’t be completed until 2022 at the earliest, and the first taste most travellers get of the Thai capital is a long queue at immigratio­n.

“In three to five years time, we might not reach our targeted tourist growth due to a lack of airport capacity,” said Thongyoo Suphavitta­yakorn, a spokesman for the Associatio­n of Thai Travel Agents. “The problem with the Thai government is they want to increase the number of visitors but they don’t stop to check first if we’re able to accommodat­e” them.

Once out of the terminal building, visitors must contend with the Bangkok traffic, the world’s most congested after Mexico City, according to TomTom NV’s traffic index.

“We took five hours to go to the hotel just because of the traffic,” said Diogo Matos, a 28-year-old first-time visitor from Portugal. “It was a horrible start to our trip.”

Thailand’s ability to attract tourists has defied the effects of a military coup, floods, political protests, a tsunami, airport blockades and the global financial crisis. In the past 15 years, more visitors have arrived from Europe, North America, Japan and Southeast Asia. But it’s the explosion in Chinese visitors since the 2012 Chinese road movie Lost in Thailand that has changed the industry.

The number of Chinese visitors to Thailand has tripled in the past five years, to 8.8 million in 2016. They account for more than a quarter of all foreign tourists and 28 per cent of revenue, according to official data.

The sudden influx, boosted by packaged tours arranged in China, led to accusation­s of so-called zero-dollar tourism, where groups were shepherded through shopping and sightseein­g itinerarie­s that provided little benefit to the host country.

A clampdown last year on those tours — 29 operators were prosecuted — caused a temporary dip in Chinese arrivals, but the tour numbers soon rebounded, and the number of independen­t travellers from China, making their way around the country with the help of their smartphone­s and Google Translate, continues to rise.

Meanwhile, the government is making efforts to clean up the country’s image. Former Tourism Minister Kobkarn Wattanavra­ngkul, who was replaced in the cabinet reshuffle, began a crackdown on sex tourism last year, with police and army officials raiding bars and hostels in Pattaya’s red-light district.

On the island of Phuket, attempts have been made to clear away the beach touts and reduce littering. In October, the government extended a ban on trips to the nearby Koh Khai islands, because of damage to the coral reef from speedboats that brought thousands of day-trippers. Last month, 21 beaches in popular spots like Pattaya and Krabi instituted a smoking ban.

“They want to shift the emphasis away from quantity and towards the quality of tourists coming,” said Patrick Cooke, an editor in Manila for Oxford Business Group Ltd. “To do that, obviously more investment is required in the luxury segment and the wellness segment.”

One plan includes a Japaneseba­cked $15 billion double-rail link from the capital to Chiang Mai in the north that would open up cities and towns along its route. Another is to build a new regional airport in the south at Betong, an area prone to unrest from Muslim separatist­s.

Phuket opened a new internatio­nal terminal last year, looking to become a gateway for surroundin­g regions like Phang Nga and Krabi.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Chinese tourists take pictures at a Buddhist temple in Chiang Mai, Thailand. The number of Chinese visitors to the Land of Smiles has tripled in the past five years to 8.8 million in 2016. The deluge has strained Thailand’s airports beyond capacity.
GETTY IMAGES Chinese tourists take pictures at a Buddhist temple in Chiang Mai, Thailand. The number of Chinese visitors to the Land of Smiles has tripled in the past five years to 8.8 million in 2016. The deluge has strained Thailand’s airports beyond capacity.

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