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China expects record-breaking travel rush

BEIJING (XINHUA) – China is on track for a bumper travel season, with travel authorities and tourism industry players expecting record-breaking journey numbers during the upcoming Spring Festival, adding new steam to the country’s economic recovery.

The Spring Festival, which falls on February 10 this year, is China’s biggest festival and a day for family reunions. It will serve as an important window for observing vitality and consumer confidence levels in the world’s second-largest economy.

With record demand for travel, this year’s Spring Festival holiday is poised to become the most vibrant and prosperous in recent years, experts said.

NEW RECORDS

An estimated 80 million passenger trips, a record high, are likely to be handled by China’s civil aviation sector during this year’s Spring Festival travel rush, which starts on January 26 and ends on March 5, according to the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC).

The figure represents a 44.9-per-cent surge compared with the same period of 2023 and is an increase of 9.8 per cent from the level recorded during the Spring Festival travel rush in 2019.

ABOVE & BELOW: Tourists visit an ice amusement spot on the Songhuajiang River Harbin section in Harbin, northeast China’s Heilongjiang province; and walk among green plum flowers in Yongtai County of Fuzhou, southeast China’s Fujian province. PHOTO: XINHUA
PHOTO: XINHUA

To handle the spike in air travel passenger levels, the country’s airlines have planned to add over 2,500 flights during the 40-day period, taking into consideration the likely demand for trips to popular destinations including Southeast Asian countries, Japan, South Korea and other neighbouring regions, said Liang Nan, a CAAC official.

Liang said the CAAC has urged airlines to intensify efforts to increase international flights, especially those to neighbouring regions and countries, and ensure safe operation during the Spring Festival travel surge.

The 2024 Spring Festival is likely to elevate the tourism market to a higher peak, judging from the online booking situation, said vice president of Tuniu, a Chinese online travel services provider, Qi Chunguang, .

Qi said some of the company’s tourism products designed for the Spring Festival were sold out much earlier than in previous years, with the list including trips to popular destinations in northern European countries.

Concerning domestic travel, he said trips to the country’s northeastern regions have become so popular that local tourism reception capacity there has proved almost saturated in recent times. “Such a situation never happened before,” he said.

SOLID START

The eight-day Spring Festival holiday, which starts on February 10, is the first major holiday after the New Year holiday, which produced a travel boom in China’s culture and tourism market, ensuring a solid start for China’s economic recovery efforts in 2024.

During the three-day New Year holiday that ended on January 1, a total of 135 million domestic tourist trips were made, up 155.3 per cent year on year, according to data from the Ministry of Culture and Tourism.

The total revenue of the country’s tourism market surpassed CNY79.73 billion (about USD11.22 billion) over the course of the three days, tripling that of the same holiday period last year and increasing 5.6 per cent compared with 2019.

China recorded 5.18 million inbound and outbound trips during the three days, a 4.7-fold increase compared with the figure for the same period a year earlier and returning to the 2019 level, according to the National Immigration Administration.

China Tourism Academy President Dai Bin said 2023 saw China’s domestic tourism market recovering rapidly, while in 2024 it will enter a new stage of prosperity.

Dai predicted that total domestic travel will exceed six billion visits in 2024 and that domestic tourism revenue is likely to surpass CNY6 trillion.

He expected the country’s inbound and outbound trips to exceed 264 million visits this year, generating combined tourism revenue of USD107 billion.

Qi Chunguang, meanwhile, said China’s steady economic recovery in 2024, along with increasing international flights and adjustment of visa policies, will lead to a surge in outbound trips.

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