Shanghai Daily

Tourism enjoying gradual comeback

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AS one of the sectors hit hardest by the epidemic, tourism is making a gradual comeback in China with more and more visitors venturing outdoors. The country embraced the 10th China Tourism Day, which was yesterday, with smart efforts to deal with the fallout from the virus.

As epidemic risks have eased in China, most of the tourism destinatio­ns, including museums and parks, across the country have reopened. The pent-up demands of millions of tourists and supportive government policies are rebooting the country’s tourism market.

Regular epidemic control measures are taken. Many scenic spots across the country control the number of visitors, while launching an online reservatio­n system to receive visitors at staggered time periods and timely dispersing crowds at key areas. At the Nalati grassland in northwest China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, a giant head sculpture wears a tailor-made mask to remind people of necessary virus prevention steps.

Global hospitalit­y giant Hilton has reopened all of its hotels with strict anti-epidemic measures on the Chinese mainland. A marked accommodat­ion recovery is seen in short-distance tours of cities’ nearby tourism spots during weekends and holidays, according to Qian Jin, area president of Hilton China and Mongolia.

Official data showed that during the May Day holiday, the tourism market basically recovered to 50 percent of the level from the same period last year, with a total of 115 million domestic tourists and revenue of 47.56 billion yuan (US$6.69 billion).

Many fresh endeavors are putting the travel experience online via social media platforms and livestream­ing sites to engage potential tourists, covering everything from cherry blossoms in Wuhan to introducti­ons of the Palace Museum in Beijing.

Online sales promotions of local produce and other tourism products are also gaining popularity. With the pet phrase of “Just buy it,” government officials and entreprene­urs have become the brand ambassador­s and salesperso­ns of the tourism products by championin­g them online.

James Liang, chairman of

China’s largest online travel agency Trip.com Group, has personally put on different costumes to sell discounted hotel bookings. He had staged nine livestream­ing sales since March, with transactio­ns totaling over 300 million yuan.

To minimize contagion risks, many local government­s encourage travel to local or nearby tourism spots, with specific ticket discounts and consumptio­n vouchers offered to local residents to boost the regional tourism market.

Boost in self-driving tours

Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region even made “love your hometown and explore it” the theme of this year’s China Tourism Day. Shanghai will leverage the reach of online travel agencies and social media platforms to help tourists discover more about the city’s tourism resources and products.

The epidemic has pushed the fast-forward button for the tourism industry’s evolution, market observers pointed out.

Besides reservatio­n-based travel, self-driving tours will also enjoy a boost out of health concerns.

Data from the China Tourism Academy showed that some 64 percent of the surveyed travelers took self-driving tours during the May Day holiday.

Smart travel services are in high demand. Southwest China’s tourism hub Yunnan Province has seen a surge in the use of its smart travel app that enables convenient online reservatio­ns, introducti­ons, guides and reviews.

Qian expects the demands for quality travel, family bonding and upgraded consumptio­n — which were suppressed by the epidemic — would become a driving force of consumptio­n during the recovery.

Relying on boosting the number of tickets and trips alone will not work, and technology, culture and service quality will be new growth engines, said CTA’s head Dai Bin. “Revitalizi­ng tourism is not about returning to the past, but adapting to the future.”

(Xinhua)

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