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Share Price: 171.40
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Change: 1.15 (0.68%)
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Cancelled bookings, empty rooms: coronavirus takes toll on tourism

Wed, 04th Mar 2020 17:18

* Hoteliers warn of collapse in reservations

* Travel industry accounts for 10% of global economy

* Unclear how quickly it will recover from crisis

By Elisa Anzolin, Josephine Mason and Maya Nikolaeva

MILAN/LONDON/PARIS, March 4 (Reuters) - Venice hotelier
Judith Boulbain has to go back almost two decades to the 9/11
attacks to recall a time when business was this bad.

Only a month before Easter, one of the busiest holidays in
the European calendar, the owner of the Hotel San Samuele in the
heart of Venice has seen more than 80% of reservations
cancelled, and future bookings have evaporated.

The coronavirus, which emerged in the central Chinese city
of Wuhan late last year, has spread around the world, with more
new cases now appearing outside China than inside.

Italy is the worst-hit country in Europe, preparing to close
schools, cinemas and theatres after more than 100 people died
and confirmed coronavirus cases rose above 3,000.

"People are scared, some left early, others didn't show up,
others called to ask for a refund," says Boulbain, 46,
originally from France, who has been running the Italian hotel
since 2006 and has been in the business for almost 25 years.

Her problems illustrate the havoc across the global travel
industry, as companies restrict employees' travel, major trade
shows are axed and holidaymakers choose to stay at home or
postpone plans to book a spring break or summer holiday.

BIG BUSINESS

The rapid spread of the virus has plunged the travel and
tourism industry, which accounts for more than 10% of global
economic growth, into one of its worst crises, according to
interviews with more than a dozen industry experts, hotel owners
and tour operators.

Travel and tourism accounted for about 319 million jobs, or
10% of total world employment in 2018, according to the World
Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC). Leisure represents almost 80%
of the total compared with 20% for business spend, it says.

Airlines have suffered the most since the outbreak began,
but hotel groups like Hyatt Hotels Corp, cruise operators
like Carnival Corp and holiday companies
including TUI are also reeling.

"We don't know when this (epidemic) is going to end," says
Boulbain.

BLEAK OUTLOOK

Experts paint a bleak picture in the near term.

International travel is expected to fall by 1.5% this year,
the first drop since 2009 at the height of the global financial
crisis, according to consultancy Tourism Economics, an Oxford
Economics company. During the 2003 SARS outbreak, rates of
travel fell just 0.3%.

With China at the centre of this latest outbreak, Asia
Pacific will be the hardest hit region, with a double-digit
decline in visitor arrivals forecast for 2020 at 10.5%,
according to Tourism Economics.

People have become more resilient to health crises over the
past decade or so, on average returning to travel and holidays
swiftly once an outbreak is contained, Tourism Economics'
analysis shows.

But the coronavirus is unprecedented in its geographic
spread. The consultancy is using SARS as its benchmark, which
means they expect the virus to be contained by the end of the
first half of the year.

Under that scenario, travel rates would start to recover
from around July but it will take until 2021/22 before the
industry has recovered completely, David Goodger, managing
director of Europe and the Middle East at Tourism Economics,
told Reuters.

"If the spread of the coronavirus continues, the impacts on
tourism could last longer and be much more severe than SARS,"
the consultancy said in a report published this week.

KNOCK-ON EFFECT

It's having a knock-on effect beyond tourism. Businesses
near a hotel on the Spanish island of Tenerife, which has been
under lockdown with hundreds of tourists inside since Feb. 24,
are struggling to deal with the lack of customers.

Beverley Veness, a hairdresser from England and owner of the
'Bamboo' hair salon for the past seven years, located in a
shopping centre in front of the H10 Costa Adeje Palace Hotel,
said her business had been "massively affected" by the lockdown.

"Last week I probably did as many costumers in the whole
week as I would do in maybe two hours," she told Reuters,
holding an empty appointment book.

To woo customers into making bookings for later in the year,
many hotel chains including Melia Hotels, Pangea Group
and B the Travel Brand in Spain said they are offering discounts
and loosening their cancellation policies.

With almost no bookings for the coming months, Ca’ Pagan, a
boutique hotel in Venice's city centre, is offering a discount
of up to 60% in March and up to 30% in April, owner Giacomo
Busatto says.

"Only some Italians are coming, no foreign people," he said.

Those measures may eventually lure back travellers but
people are more likely to book last-minute as they wait and see
how and where the virus spreads.

"We do not know for how long we can carry on like this. We
are losing money. We already had an exceptionally high tide,
what's next? A plague?" says Boulbain.

(Reporting by Josephine Mason, Elisa Anzolin in MILAN, Maya
Nikolaeva in PARIS, Illona Wissenbach in FRANKFURT, Ingrid
Melander and Belen Carreno in MADRID; Guillermo Martinez and
Marco Trujillo in TENERIFE; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

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