Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Energy holiday: German pensioners suggested wintering in Turkey to save gas

As a solution to cope with soaring prices and preserve energy, German pensioners could be encouraged to travel for longer periods to warmer countries, including Turkey, over the winter, according to a travel agencies associatio­n

-

AS GERMANY faces a potential abrupt halt in Russian gas supplies, a travel agencies associatio­n has put forth an unusual suggestion in face of a possible shortage and even higher energy prices in the coming winter: Sending senior citizens on vacation to warmer locations during the cold season.

Russian gas is vital to Europe and Germany in particular. But Berlin has come under pressure to unwind a business relationsh­ip that critics says is helping to fund Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.

Europe’s biggest economy aims to reduce its dependence on Russia to zero as quickly as possible but has opposed an immediate stop to imports.

A solution to cope with soaring prices and preserve energy, according to Marija Linnhoff, the chair of the German Associatio­n of Independen­t Travel Agencies (VUSR), are pensioners.

Linnhoff this week proposed senior citizens be enabled to travel for longer periods to warmer countries over the winter, citing Turkey, Tunisia and the Spanish tourist island of Mallorca as potential destinatio­ns.

And the government could encourage more citizens, some of which have already been spending winters in some of these locations, by subsidizin­g such trips, she told the Mallorca Zeitung.

Leading the associatio­n representi­ng more than 7,000 travel agencies in Germany, Linnhoff even proposed subsidies of up to 500 euros ($527.69) to make such trips more affordable.

“The starting price for such a trip to Mallorca is currently around 1,300 euros per person. That’s 50 days in a middleclas­s hotel including half board and flights. With self-catering, we are currently at 950 euros per person,” she said.

“You kill some birds with one stone: Retirees would also receive grants, we save gas for industry and support holiday destinatio­ns,” she noted.

“Traveling against Putin is better than freezing because of Putin,” Linnhoff told the Rheinische Post.

Still, her proposal encountere­d criticism from politician­s. Social Democratic Party’s (SPD) Ralf Stegner told the Bild newspaper of a “crazy idea” that “certainly does not contribute to solving our energy policy challenges.”

Jana Schimke, the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) politician and chairperso­n of the tourism committee in the Bundestag, said “the proposal would cost at least 10 billion euros, and that the combinatio­n of rent and travel costs would be an additional financial burden.

“It’s not measurable what would be saved in the end,” she told Bild. “Only a few retirees should be able to afford the double burden of continuing to rent at home and stay abroad, despite state subsidies,” she added.

Russian gas accounted for 55% of Germany’s imports last year. Berlin has said it wants to wean itself off Russian supplies but expects to be largely reliant on Moscow for gas until the middle of 2024.

It remains unclear whether an abrupt halt would happen and the officials said Germany wanted to avert an escalation, such as by backing a European gas embargo, having already supported sanctions against Moscow on coal and oil.

But they now fear Russia could cut off gas flows unilateral­ly and want to be able to cope if it does. German officials are said to be quietly preparing for any sudden halt in Russian gas supplies with an emergency package that could include taking control of critical firms, sources told Reuters yesterday.

Such a proposal would also be of great value for Turkish tourism as well, and would contribute to employment, sector representa­tives told the Turkish daily Hürriyet yesterday.

Efforts have been underway to diversify the industry and markets, as well as to enable Turkey to make the most of the period outside summer.

The southern gem of Antalya and its surroundin­g regions are often preferred by German nationals, who are among Turkey’s biggest tourist sources.

Germany was Turkey’s second-biggest market last year just after Russia. Some 3.1 million German tourists arrived in Turkey last year, a 175.7% yearover-year increase from 1.1 million in 2020, overshadow­ed by the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The figure is still below 5 million in 2019 prior to the outbreak. Arrivals had reached a record high of around 5.5 million back in 2015.

 ?? ?? A view of a beach in the southern Mediterran­ean province of Antalya, Turkey, May, 1, 2022.
A view of a beach in the southern Mediterran­ean province of Antalya, Turkey, May, 1, 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye