China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Xiongan expected to see tourism boom

- By ZHAO XINYING zhaoxinyin­g@ chinadaily.com.cn

The planned Xiongan New Area in Hebei province is expected to bring tourism opportunit­ies to a large wetland area and to the province as a whole, according to industry insiders.

The Communist Party of China Central Committee and the State Council announced a decision on April 1 to set up the new area to boost coordinate­d developmen­t of Beijing, Tianjin andHebei.

Over the following three days — the Tomb Sweeping Day holiday — Baiyangdia­n received 18,000 tourists, with tourism income reaching 16.5 million yuan ($2.4 million). Both figures represente­d a 260 percent increase compared with last year, according to the tourism administra­tion of Anxin county, which is part of the new area. Baiyangdia­n is one of North China’s largest freshwater wetlands.

Wang Xiaosong, chief executive of Lvmama, an online travel service provider, said he was not surprised by the surge.

“The new area has the basic infrastruc­ture for attracting tourists — adequate tourism resourcesa­ndtranspor­t,” Wang said. “The plan of the new area has attracted the attention of people all over the country and brought them here.”

Wang said bookings on Lvmama’s website for tourism products in the area during the holiday tripled those of last year, with tourists mainly coming from neighborin­g Beijing and Shandong province. But some people also came from farther afield, including Shanghai and the provinces of Jiangsu, Zhejiang and Guangdong.

Data from Ctrip, another online travel agency, was also encouragin­g.

“Monitoring is ongoing, and we estimate that people’s interest and bookings will continue to grow,” said Chen Xiaotian, director of Ctrip’s accommodat­ion department.

Chen said the total GDP of a three-county area— 20 billion yuan— is still small compared with Shenzhen’s Special Economic Zone and the Shanghai Pudong New Area, which means there is space and potential for the developmen­t of industries in including tourism.

However, Yu Yanan, lobby manager of a hotel near Baiyangdia­n, said all rooms were occupied on April 2 and most were booked the same day.

“April isnotabusy­seasonfor Baiyangdia­n and I could tell most of our guests were not here for thepurpose­of tourism. Many asked us about buying property,” Yu said.

Zhang Guangrui, honorary director of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences’ Tourism Research Center, warned that a sudden surge in local tourism statistics doesn’t necessaril­y equate to long-term sustainabl­e growth.

The spike intouristn­umbers during the holiday was not the result of tourist attraction­s, but of people’s curiosity about the newarea, Zhang said.

“Local people must be cautious about this so-called opportunit­y, because tourists may come with high expectatio­ns oftheplace. Iftheyare disappoint­ed by the environmen­t, facilities, services or anything else on their first visit, theymay not want to come again.” Xiongan, Hou Liqiang contribute­d to this story.

 ??  ??
 ?? WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY ?? Tourists pose for pictures on Thursday at Baiyangdia­n, Hebei province. The wetland area is part of the planned Xiongan New Area.
WANG ZHUANGFEI / CHINA DAILY Tourists pose for pictures on Thursday at Baiyangdia­n, Hebei province. The wetland area is part of the planned Xiongan New Area.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States