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Thai airports tentative over tourism reopening

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

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Airports of Thailand (AoT) is welcoming the country’s planned reopening to foreign visitors as airlines and other businesses have been struggling due to the Covid-19 pandemic, though it said arrivals won’t pick up until October.


AoT president, NitinaiSirismatthakarn, said on Monday the launch of the tourism “Sandbox” programme in Phuket next month may not attract as many tourists as the government had expected, as the island is entering the “low season”, which also coincides with rainy season.


International traffic is expected to pick up in October, which is considered as the start of the “high season” for tourism, he said.


When the programme — under which tourists from countries with low and medium Covid-risk will be allowed to enter Phuket — commences next month, there will be around 18 international flights serving Thailand per day on average, many of which are destined for Phuket.


Mr Nitinai said the number is equal to about five per cent of pre-pandemic traffic, adding before most flights were grounded due to Covid-19, there were about 380 Thailand-bound international flights each day.


His remarks came on the back of a message from the International Air Transport Association (Iata), which warned restoring global connectivity will require far more than regional or individual state initiatives.


Connectivity needs countries at both ends of the journey to be open, said Willie Walsh, Iata’s director-general.
He noted many of the world’s largest air travel markets, such as Australia, China, the UK, Japan, and Canada remain essentially closed with no clear plans towards a reopening.


While Mr Nitinai said the AoT has prepared its facilities and resources and is ready for the reopening, he admitted he was not certain if airlines and tourism businesses share his enthusiasm.


For example, Thai Airways International (THAI) is in the middle of a debt-restructuring process, while many shops and some tourist attractions remain closed after facing financial woes from the protracted pandemic.


While the AoT hasn’t empirically analysed how successful the Phuket Sandbox will be, the agency is aware that a fresh outbreak after reopening could hurt prospects for the high season, which runs from October to January.

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