Tourism industry moves to counter COVID-19 influence
By Yang
Kunyi and Song Lin
As the
current outbreak of the Coronavirus Disease (COVID-19) continues to develop,
the World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) and the World Health Organization (WHO)
made a joint statement on February 26.
The
statement stressed that International cooperation is vital for ensuring the tourism
sector to effectively contribute to the containment of COVID-19.
UNWTO
and WHO committed to work in close consultation to assist States in ensuring
that health measures be implemented in ways that minimize unnecessary
interference with international traffic and trade.
UNWTO
said that tourism’s response to the disease outbreak needed to be measured and
consistent, proportionate to the public health threat and based on local risk
assessment, in line with the WHO’s overall guidance and recommendations. Travel
restrictions going beyond these may cause unnecessary interference with
international traffic, including negative repercussions on the tourism sector.
The
tourism sector, as a booming industry in China, contributed more than 11
percent of the country’s total GDP in 2018, according to the Ministry of
Tourism and Culture. In context of the disease outbreak, the contribution could
drop by 1 to 1.5 percentage points in 2020, according to Song Ding, a research
fellow at the Shenzhen-based China Development Institute.
Industry
insiders noted that there is likely to be a quick rebound in their business if
the coronavirus can be contained soon. Jane Sun, CEO of a leading online travel
service provider trip.com, said that although the tourism industry is taking a
short-term hit, demand will not decrease in the long run.
According
to statistics from trip.com, ticket orders on the platform soared 200 percent
the same month SARS ended in 2003, and during the first Labor Day holiday after
SARS, flight bookings jumped more than fivefold year-on-year.
China
Tourist Attractions Association, together with 51 tourist attractions across
China, has issued a convention on strengthening epidemic prevention measures at
tourist sites to provide visitors a safe environment, and in reply to the
country's call to resume normal work and business.
The
first batch of 51 tourist attractions include 33 sites with China's highest 5A
rating, such as Pingyao Ancient City.
The
document proposes a total of nine suggestions and operating standards covering
important issues such as disinfection of equipment, health management of
working staff, time-sharing control on visitor flow and online information
disclosure concerning epidemic prevention.
In
tourist sites with high visitor traffic density, big data techniques will be
introduced to help divide reservations into different periods.
The
convention will give guidance to tourist sites on epidemic prevention and
control after their opening, as well as give impetus to the recovery of
cultural and tourism-related industries, said Zeng Bowei, an official with the
China Tourism Association.
Source: Global
Times
Children
fly kites in flower fields of Jiangan Country, Yibin of Sichuan Province. The
city canceled this year’s Spring Flower Festival due to the COVID-19 influence,
but still getting ready for tourists. (Photo by Lan Feng/People’s Daily Online)
Tourism industry moves to counter COVID-19 influence
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