Extreme Tourism Market Expected to Witness High Growth over the Forecast Period 2020 2026 – 3rd Watch News

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Extreme Tourism Market Expected to Witness High Growth over the Forecast Period 2020 2026 - 3rd Watch News

How Disneylands Galaxys Edge fits into the Star Wars universe – OCRegister

A new book from Lucasfilm and Walt Disney Imagineering explains how the Star Wars planet at the heart of the Galaxys Edge themed land in Disneyland fits into the vast universe of a galaxy far, far away.

The new Travelers Guide to Batuu serves as an in-world travel guide to the Black Spire Outpost village on the Star Wars planet of Batuu, the setting for the 14-acre lands at Disneyland in Anaheim and Disneys Hollywood Studios in Florida.

Disneyland remains closed until further notice amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Disneys Hollywood Studios in Florida home to Batuu East is set to reopen on Tuesday, July 15.

SEE ALSO: Brook and Robin Lopez will get to ride Disney World coasters during NBA bubble season

The backstory and the residents of Black Spire Outpost and Batuu help frame the adventures that play out in Star Wars: Galaxys Edge. Delving deeper into the geography and history of the planet in the Travelers Guide to Batuu helps peel back additional layers in Galaxys Edge and offers hints at stories yet to be told in the Star Wars themed lands.

A galactic map in the Travelers Guide to Batuu places the Galaxys Edge planet on the western reaches of the outer rim of the fictional Star Wars universe.

It is precisely this location that has shaped the planets history, according to Travelers Guide to Batuu. Before advanced hyperspace capabilities, Batuus position made it a bustling fueling stop for ships heading into Wild Space. With the advances in technology and well-charted hyperlanes, most modern travelers choose to bypass Batuu, resulting in the planet becoming a crossroads for adventurers and a haven for those who prefer life in the shadows.

SEE ALSO: Downtown Disney now selling coronavirus masks with Mickey Mouse, Hulk and Baby Yoda characters

Black Spire Outpost the planets small but most populous settlement sits in the Surabat River Valley near the neighboring villages of Galma, Surabat and Peka.

Galma is a short shuttle ride from Black Spire Outpost.

To many it feels undeveloped as most of the structures here have been scavenged and repurposed, according to Travelers Guide to Batuu. Broken-down speeders and ships serve as homes and workshops for the resourceful mechanics who live here today.

Galma is known as a haven for illegal podracing and the gambling that surrounds the outlawed sport.

These activities attract a criminal element and I do not recommend it for most off-worlders, according to the book. Gambling on these activities is a quick way to lose all your credits and you do not want to be in debt to anyone who frequents this district.

SEE ALSO: These are the 26 Downtown Disney shops and restaurants that will reopen Thursday

The tiny town of Surabat offers few modern conveniences.

The hardy residents, though isolated, build sturdy homes that sit nestled against the base of the beautiful spires and mountains, according to Travelers Guide to Batuu. Weather here is more harsh than other parts of Batuu with strong winds throughout the year.

Like the rest of Batuu, Surabat is distinguished by the towering petrified spires that dot the landscape.

It remains a favorite jumping-off point for mountain hikers and thrill-seekers looking to climb the ancient spires, according to the book. Many who live here sustain themselves as lichen harvesters, bravely climbing the spires to collect valuable golden lichen.

SEE ALSO: How will Disneyland keep fans from getting too close to Mickey Mouse?

Peka is known for its simple huts and log cabins built from native trees.

I find the residents here welcoming and sociable to visitors, willing to share their modest, family-oriented lives with those who pass through, according to Travelers Guide to Batuu.

Peka residents survive off the land and the river that runs past the community.

Many work as fishermen and farmers, some even offering to take off-worlders on fishing excursions that let you catch and cook your own lunch on the banks of the flowing river, according to the book.

SEE ALSO: Which Disneyland shows and attractions will remain closed when the park reopens?

Batuu is a short hyper-space hop to a number of nearby planets in the Star Wars galaxy.

For Star Wars fans, the forest moon of Endor from Return of the Jedi is likely the best-known destination in the Batuu region of the galaxy.

The lush forest planet of Takodana had been the perfect planet for a day trip before Maz Kanatas castle was destroyed in The Force Awakens.

SEE ALSO: How Disneyland will enforce mandatory mask rule when park reopens

A short commute to Bakura offers the closest big city to Batuu. Mokivj is known for its beautiful sunsets and ten moons, but catastrophic lava flows have devastated the planet.

The unfortunately named Gannaria is a refuge for smugglers involved in the illegal spice trade. The mountainous planet of Rattatak is home to warlords and gladiatorial societies.

Yakorki attracts thousands each year for the annual Fungi Fest. High tides cover the white sand beaches of Zaddja each night. The remote planet of Umme is a haven for big-game safaris.

The new Travelers Guide to Batuu offers recommendations on where to eat, shop and sightsee during a visit to Galaxys Edge while providing backstories for the characters and locations in the Star Wars themed land.

The Travelers Guide to Batuu is ostensibly penned by Eloc Throno, a galactic historian and travel writer who has also written guides to Tatooine, Mustafar and other Star Wars destinations. The book also credits Lucasfilm creative executives Pablo Hidalgo and Matt Martin as well as Walt Disney Imagineering managing story editor Margaret Kerrison who all had a hand in developing the backstory for Galaxys Edge.

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How Disneylands Galaxys Edge fits into the Star Wars universe - OCRegister

Disney World’s July 11 reopening: 6 things to watch – CNN

(CNN) For Disney World's most ardent fans, tomorrow is indeed only a day away.

Disney World is the biggest of big deals in the theme park universe. And the eyes of the theme park world will be on it this weekend.

1. Reservations and capacity

Two of Walt Disney World Resort's parks are set to reopen Saturday: Magic Kingdom Park (pictured) and Disney's Animal Kingdom. EPCOT and Disney's Hollywood Studios are slated to reopen on July 15.

Matt Stroshane/Walt Disney World Resort

Guests must follow four steps to use the system:

1. Get a valid park admission linked to a Disney account you've set up online.2. Register the members of your party.3. Select a date and a park to attend.4. Finally, review and confirm your reservations.

For instance, at 1 p.m. ET Friday, there were no parks available for annual passholders in July. But August had some availability, especially on weekdays late in the month. People already holding theme park tickets or who have a Disney Resort reservation still have openings and options in July. Right now, spots for Hollywood Studios in July are particularly hard to come by.

As the situation is in constant flux, you might need patience and flexibility at first. Or you might get lucky and snag your top choices right away.

CNN Travel will be looking at how the new system works and what level of crowds Magic Kingdom and Animal Kingdom attract on Saturday and beyond.

Florida has seen some of sharpest spikes in Covid-19 cases in the United States and the world recently. No one can predict how that might affect things in coming weeks.

2. Temperature screenings

All guests will be required to a undergo temperature screening before entering a theme park at Walt Disney World Resort.

David Roark/Walt Disney World Resort

By now, it should be no surprise to theme park guests that they'll undergo a temperature screening before being allowed in. Here's what Disney says to expect:

"All guests will be required to undergo temperature screenings prior to entering a theme park. Based on guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, anyone displaying a temperature of 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or higher will be directed to an additional location for rescreening and assistance.

"Those who again measure 100.4 degrees Fahrenheit or higher will not be allowed entry, nor will those in their party," Disney said.

Schaffner said that back-up reading should prevent most problems.

For someone who does pop the 100.4 limit, he said "if that person goes under tent, gets a cool drink, and is permitted to rest, they'll cool down rapidly enough to past the test -- assuming they are not ill and do not have an infection."

Disney told CNN Travel on Thursday that secondary screenings take place in a cooler, tented area several minutes after the initial reading.

Dr. Shannon Hopson, an endocrinologist in Corvallis, Oregon, shared her second opinion: "You can get an increased body temperature from being overly hot, but I wouldn't think this would be particularly common."

Worried anyway?

Hopson's advice is to make sure you're well-hydrated before you get in line and shield your face with a hat or a cap with a big brim. She also said set your appointment for a morning arrival if you can so you'll arrive when it's cooler.

Hopson is actually more worried about potential Covid-19 carriers that temperature screenings won't catch.

"The biggest problem with temperature screenings is that they can provide a false sense of security. They're everywhere. We do them for patients and all staff at my office, but they only catch the sick people," Hopson said. "We know that asymptomatic carriers can spread coronavirus as well as sick people, so there's just no way to screen those people out."

We'll be watching how temperature checks are going -- and how the public reacts to them.

3. Dining

Guests at Disney's Riviera Resort can see Minnie, Mickey and the gang during breakfast at Topolino's Terrace -- Flavors of the Riviera, the resort's rooftop restaurant. During the phased reopening, characters will maintain proper physical distancing while parading through the restaurant.

Matt Stroshane/Walt Disney World Resort

Like restaurants anywhere else, Disney has had to upend its normal dining experience and find new ways to deliver food and drinks to hungry and thirsty guests.

In a news release, Disney said "new measures promoting health and well-being will be implemented." You can expect to see "enhanced cleaning in seating, dining and common areas, as well as changes to self-serve options."

-- You'll need a face covering when entering and leaving dine-in restaurants, but obviously they can be removed when you're seated and you're ready to eat.

-- If you're a day guest, you'll absolutely need a reservation for dining at a Disney Resort restaurant. And if you're an overnight guest, it's highly recommended.

-- Wherever possible, Disney is offering cashless and contactless exchanges.

4. Character interactions

Mickey Mouse will star in the "Mickey and Friends Cavalcade" when Magic Kingdom Park reopens.

Olga Thompson/Walt Disney World Resort

Perhaps the most cherished memories from a Disney visit are children rushing with mad joy into the arms of a beloved character. Unfortunately, it's a look-but-don't-touch policy for character interactions with Mickey and his pals during the pandemic.

But Disney will be making it a visual spectacle.

In the Magic Kingdom, "characters will cavalcade along the traditional parade route throughout the day." And over at Animal Kingdom, guests might witness "Disney characters setting sail down Discovery River on special boats, such as Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, Pocahontas and others."

We'll be keeping an eye out for how these encounters go. Will the kiddies still enjoy these sightings and be able to live without the hugs?

5. Rides and lines

Ground markings will help promote proper physical distancing in attraction queues. And rides won't be filled to capacity.

Matt Stroshane/Walt Disney World Resort

So there's not much point in limiting park capacity, requiring masks and keeping characters apart from guests and then letting folks bunch up in attraction lines and on the rides themselves.

To that end, you'll be seeing signs for social distancing in queues. And rides will be sent out with empty seats, with only people in the same party bunched up together.

In its news release, Disney said it expects to open up very popular attractions on Saturday such as Space Mountain, The Haunted Mansion, Pirates of the Caribbean and the Seven Dwarfs Mine Train.

Tremaine says to keep in mind there are no Fast Passes for now in the Magic Kingdom. Rides are first-come, first-served.

We'll be watching how the combo of fewer people in the park vs. social distancing on the rides plays out. Will waits be shorter, longer or about the same?

6. The Disney experience during the pandemic

Ground markings will help promote proper physical distancing outside retail shops. How will such measures go over?

David Roark/Walt Disney World Resort

Perhaps the most fascinating aspect of the reopening will be the reaction of the guests to all the new safety measures. After all, a July 2020 visit is going to be very different than what guests enjoyed pre-pandemic.

Tremaine said, "The safety measures at Universal Studios and Dollywood [in Tennessee] haven't put much of a dent in my enjoyment of the experience. Hand sanitizer before rides and distancing between parties isn't that hard to manage."

But what about a face mask? And in a sticky Orlando summer, too.

"It definitely isn't ideal to have to wear a mask right now. I know Disney die-hards who say they won't go back until they don't have to wear masks. But I think for a lot of people, we're willing to put up with the heat and inconvenience and discomfort of a mask if it means we get to be somewhere we love," she said.

"It's been a really bad few months. If a mask is the tradeoff for a little bit of pixie dust in our lives, so be it."

Disney has confirmed they are designating specific areas where families can take a break and take off their masks.

"It's great time to point out that we, as theme park guests, often don't realize how much work is going on behind the scenes at the entertainment attractions that we visit," Lewison said. "Even the smaller regional amusement parks are pretty complex operations, and Covid has added another layer of intense complexity over what is already a complicated operation."

He said guests should keep in mind that "theme park employees also have to be temperature-checked, social distance from each other, wear masks and take meals and breaks in safe situations. They're also in unfamiliar circumstances. Parks now have a trickier balance between their permitted capacities and visitor demand and staffing."

His assessment of their efforts?

"What I've seen is that the parks have taken on a huge challenge and they're doing an amazing job with it in a very uncertain new environment."

Lewison had some advice for people going Saturday and beyond.

The "top tip is always: Make sure that you carefully follow all park rules and regulations, from signage to cast member instructions. If you're unsure, ask a cast member."

He said to be prepared for some attractions to not be available. As for the rides that are operating, guests should also expect to see some changes.

In the end, it's all about preparation, said Lewison.

"Make sure you have a comfortable mask, comfortable shoes, sunscreen, hat, hand sanitizer (just in case, although parks have done a lot to provide it), reservations, phone charger, water ... all the usual stuff that improves your day at a theme park."

Finally -- "Have fun! You're one of the lucky few at a theme park, and I'm jealous!"

CNN's Natasha Chen contributed to this report.

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Disney World's July 11 reopening: 6 things to watch - CNN

Hotels & Resorts of Halekulani Recognized by Travel + Leisure "World’s Best Awards" For Excellence In Luxury Hospitality – PRNewswire

HONOLULU, July 9, 2020 /PRNewswire/ -- Hotels and Resorts ofHalekulani, the hotel development and management division of Honolulu-basedHalekulaniCorporation,is pleased to announce that Halepuna Waikiki by Halekulani and Halekulani have been named among the top Resort Hotels in Hawaii by the Travel + Leisure 2020 World's Best Awards, with Halepuna Waikiki receiving the coveted title of the No. 1 Resort Hotel in Hawaii. This announcement marks the first year that both properties have received the prestigious award.

"We are truly humbled to have been recognized with this esteemed award for both Halekulani and Halepuna Waikiki, especially as it comes directly from Travel + Leisure readers," said Peter Shaindlin, Chief Operating Officer of Halekulani Corporation. "Witnessing the success and evolution of our legendary Halekulani brand, both in Hawaii and beyond, has been a gratifying experience and serves as a true testament to the dedication of our exceptional staff who work hard each day to create unforgettable guest experiences."

Situated across from its iconic sister property Halekulani, Halepuna Waikiki debuted in October 2019 as the first luxury boutique hotel in Waikiki. Every experience at Halepuna Waikiki by Halekulani has been designed to embody and reflect the spirit of Halekulani and bring "The House of Welcoming Waters" to life.Incorporating the culture of Hawai'i, the aloha spirit of the islands and philosophy of Halekulani, Halepuna Waikiki is a refined retreat where Hawaiian traditions, warm, engaging service and fine design enrich every guest room, dining experience and amenity.

Halekulani, long recognized around the world as one of the finest independent luxury hotels, has received more than 500 accolades, awards and honoraria since its inception in 1984. In addition to luxurious accommodations overlooking Diamond Head and Waikiki Beach, Halekulani is home to the award-winning SpaHalekulani and an array of dining experiences considered to be among the best on the island, including La Mer, Hawaii's only AAA Five Diamond and Forbes Five Star restaurant, Orchids and House Without A Key. With a strong commitment to local arts and culture, guests of Halekulani receive exclusive access to the "For You, Everything" program, which provides special and complimentary admission to some of Oahu's finest art and cultural venues and events.

The Hotels and Resorts of Halekulani portfolio also includesHalekulani Okinawa, which opened in July 2019 on the main island of Okinawa, Japan and has already been named an award-winning hotel. Locatedon the coastline within the Okinawa Kaigan Quasi-National Park, Halekulani Okinawa offers travelers a true resort experience set among a lush natural landscape where guests can experience the rich culture and heritage of the region through the hotel's immersive programming that explores the island's culture, heritage and way of life.

Every year, Travel + Leisure showcases the top travel destinations and companies around the globe as rated by its readers as the World's Best. Readers share their favorite cities, hotels, resorts, spas, restaurants, and experiences around the world, culminating in the World's Best list, and earning a spot is considered a high honor in the hotel industry. Halepuna Waikiki and Halekulani were rated based on their rooms and facilities, location, service, food and overall value. The 2020 World's Best Awards lists, as well as survey methodology, are currently featured on http://www.travelandleisure.com/worldsbest and will appear in the August issue of Travel + Leisure.

For more information, please visit http://www.halepuna.com and http://www.halekulani.com.

AboutHalekulaniCorporationHonolulu basedHalekulaniCorporation owns and operatesHalekulani, the internationally acclaimed luxury hotel in Waikiki, as well as Halepuna Waikiki byHalekulani, formerly the Waikiki Parc hotel.Halekulanirepresents a hospitality legacy of unique and iconic stature and, since its modern incarnation in 1984,Halekulanihas received more than 500 accolades, awards and honoraria, and is consistently ranked among the world's finest hotels. In 1987,HalekulaniCorporation developed Waikiki Parc hotel, a stylish boutique hotel that provided its guests with a sophisticated and contemporary hotel sensibility combined with personalized service and innovative guest experiences.HalekulaniCorporation recently transformed the Waikiki Parc hotel intoHalepuna Waikiki byHalekulani, which defines a new legacy of excellence and experience in hospitality, steeped in local culture and tradition. Offering a casual yet refined urban retreat experience, Halepuna Waikiki, Honolulu's only urban retreat,is an inspiring and gratifying haven of modernity and refinement where guests can escape, relax, restore and reconnect with the spirit of wellbeing.Hotels & Resorts ofHalekulaniis responsible for the development,expansionand management of theHalekulaniand Halepuna luxury brands.

AboutHalekulaniSince its inception in 1984,Halekulani("House Befitting Heaven") has become Hawaii's most acclaimed hotel, renowned as one of the world's finestindependent luxury hotels having received more than 500 accolades, awards and honoraria. Legendary for its luxurious accommodations, superlative dining and, according to a recent Travel + Leisure readers' poll, the "Best Service in North America," as well as having received the Reader's Choice Award as the #1 Hotel In Hawaii, the 453-room icon has long served as the destination of choice for celebrities, dignitaries, and corporate leaders the world over. Halekulaniis home to SpaHalekulani, voted #2 "Best Spa in the Country" by Conde Nast Traveler, as well as House Without A Key, Lewers Lounge, Orchids and La Mer,Hawaii'slongest consecutively earned recipient of the AAA Five Diamond and Forbes Travel Guide 5-Star restaurant awards designation for more than a quarter century. Since its inception,Halekulanihas maintained a strong commitment to arts and culture through exclusive alliances withOahu'smost iconic cultural venues. Whether lounging by its world-famous orchid pool, designed with 1.2 million pieces of imported South African glass tiles, or arranging exclusive access to Oahu's most prominent arts and cultural events and experiences,Halekulaniis steadfastly committed to providing guests and patrons alike with consummate and gracious service in the tradition of Hawaiian hospitality.Halekulaniis a member of The Leading Hotels of the World and has a longstanding partnership with Japan's legendary luxury hotel group, Imperial Hotel, Ltd., which encompasses the Imperial Hotel Tokyo, Imperial Hotel Osaka and the Kamikochi Imperial Hotel. For further information, please visitwww.halekulani.com.

About Halepuna Waikiki ByHalekulaniFrom the Hawaiian "Hale" ("House") and Puna ("Spring"), Halepuna Waikiki ("The House of Welcoming Waters"), Halepuna Waikiki byHalekulanidefines a new legacy of excellence and experience in hospitality, steeped in local culture and tradition. Offering a casual yet refined urban resort experience, Halepuna Waikiki, Honolulu's only boutique urban retreat, is an inspiring and gratifying haven of modernity and refinement where guests can escape, relax, restore and reconnect with the spirit of wellbeing. The 23-floor Halepuna Waikiki features natural elements inspired byHalekulani's subtle, light and airy interiors, with custom light fixtures, teak finishes, vaulted ceilings, floor-to-ceiling windows and works of art curated by the Honolulu Museum of Art. Its 284 intimate and sundrenched rooms and suites, with views of the Pacific Ocean and Honolulu's mountain range, have been designed for the most discerning international guests, with idyllic comfort, expansive views and enticing lanais for lounging. The eighth floor at Halepuna Waikiki has been transformed into a very special oasis featuring a heated Infinity Pool, Jacuzzi, poolside bar, spacious sun deck with private cabanas, beautifully landscaped gardens with intimate spaces for personal retreats, and a state-of-the-art fitness studio with equipment from ARTIS by TechnoGym. Adjacent to the lobby is theHalekulaniBakery & Restaurant, the hotel's full service, all day dining, restaurant with an open-air kitchen and outdoor terrace surrounded by lush tropical landscaping, which features a locally-inspired menu focusing on indigenous ingredients, as well as a glass enclosed Chocolate Room where guests can see delectable treats being made.Halepuna Waikiki byHalekulaniis a member of Preferred Hotels & Resorts.For more information, please visitwww.halepuna.com.

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Hotels & Resorts of Halekulani Recognized by Travel + Leisure "World's Best Awards" For Excellence In Luxury Hospitality - PRNewswire

The Pandemics Impact On M&AAnd What Will Happen Next – Chief Executive Group

The coronavirus pandemic and accompanying market downturn have left mergers and acquisitions in something of a quarantine themselves. Such activity has slowed to a crawl, and uncertainty reigns: What will the landscape look like when this crisis subsides? Where will opportunities arise? Is a recession likelyor has a depression already arrived?

Certainly there are those who have managed to make hay, despite the slump. Witness, for example, the $456 million deal between Johnson & Johnson and the U.S. government, and the accompanying hope that the pharmaceutical giant can fast-track a Covid-19 vaccine. But overall the picture is bleak. According to Forbes, worldwide M&A was down 35 percent from the last quarter of 2019 to the first quarter of 2020, and 39 percent in the U.S. The year-over-year decreases were 25 and 50 percent, respectively.

Particularly notable were Xerox backing out of a $35 billion deal to acquire HP, and Apollo Global Management withdrawing its $8.5 billion bid to acquire the broadcasting company Tegna Inc. and aerospace suppliers Woodward and Hexcel mutually agreeing to terminate their $6.4 billion merger. Indeed, a growing list of private equity firms have walked away from deals signed before the pandemic hit. In the PE space, we have seen financial sponsors dump at least a half-dozen deals so far in 2020 in the U.S. alone.

Nate Pund, a managing director for Houlihan Lokeys consumer, food and retail group, told SGB Executive that M&A has, in effect, come to a halt while companies assess the damage the crisis has incurred, and what might lie ahead. The latter is obviously a very tough call. There are those who believe the world is already in a recession, and certainly there are many indications that that is the case: Company valuations have plummeted, unemployment has spiked and consumers are buying little more than bread, milk and eggs.

Will the virus fade with the warm weather, as some have predicted? Will the U.S. be able to restart its economy as a result? Its all very unclear, as Pund said:

Uncertainty is the killer of everything. When you dont have any sense of the world, it is very difficult to make an informed decision. If you have bad news, you can deal with that. If you have good news, you can deal with that. But when you have uncertain news, you dont know what to do.

Some, like BNP Paribas M&A head Bruno Villard, believe the pandemic will have a lasting effect on the worldwide economic picture. As he told Bloomberg, It will not be just a blip in deals flow. But David Ludwig, Goldman Sachs head of Americas Equity Capital Markets, is more optimistic, telling that same outlet that once the threat diminishes, the rally will come in a reasonable period of time.

In the aftermath of past global crisesat least those that can be recalled in the memories of current business leadersthe deal economy was eaten by the bears only to run again with the bulls, such as was witnessed after the bursting of the Internet bubble in 2000 and the Great Recession of 2008-2009. As in past global crises, not knowing what is going to happen next in the markets has already contributed to buyers renegotiating, delaying, deferring or outright cancelling their M&A deals. Whats different this time around is that the impact of the global Covid-19 pandemic is primarily on the commercial economy rather than the financial system, leaving a big question mark as to the viability of target businesses (if not the potential buyers themselves).

The risk for buyers to proceed to do a deal in the short term is high, but there are many more factors one has to take into account to get a deal done. In addition to price and other economic terms, there are real new due diligence issues that have to be investigated, if you can even conduct a due diligence investigation in this environment, and one has to assess what debt financing will be available, and on what terms (if at all), and how much additional time to build in to any process for obtaining necessary regulatory and other third-party approvals for deals.

Johnson & Johnson is on track to begin human testing on a coronavirus vaccine this fall, with the hope that it can release 600 million to 800 million doses in early 2021. In the meantime, the company readjusted its short-term financial goals, announcing on April 14 that its forecasted 2020 revenue is expected to be between $77.5 billion and $80.5 billion, down from its previous prediction of $85.4 billion to $86.2 billion. Stock dividends and investor confidence nonetheless remained high, and obviously the company believes better things are in store if it can meet demand for the vaccine.

There are other companies with vaccines in the pipeline, too. Chillingly, there were reports in mid-April that the virus is mutating, though researchers were still confident that those drugs currently in development would be effective.

Bloomberg noted that the crisis has resulted in other healthcare deals, like Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc.s $11.5 billion acquisition of Qiagen NV, which makes testing kits. Bloomberg also pointed out that infrastructure deals remain very much on the table because cash flow is never an issue in that space and the contracts tend to be of the multiyear variety.

An interesting side note is that some deals, notably Morgan Stanleys $13 billion acquisition of the discount brokerage E-Trade, included specific provisions preventing either party from invoking the coronavirus outbreak as a reason to renegotiate. Typically such agreements are subject to material adverse effect (MAE) qualifiers, under which either party might be freed from their obligations if an unforeseen event has a long-term impact on a companys potential. But according to the terms of this deal, the pandemic could not be a reason to trigger an MAE.

Meanwhile, some sellers are pushing backand hard. After The Carlyle Group and Singaporean sovereign wealth fund GIC abandoned an agreement signed in December 2019 to make a 20% stake in American Express Global Business Travel at a $5 billion enterprise value, Carlyle claimed that AMEX had breached the no MAE clause, which did not have a specific carveout in case of a global pandemic. AMEXs well capitalized investors, including Certares Management and Qatar Investment Authority, did not take this lying down, firing back with a lawsuit in Delaware Chancery Court to force Carlyle to complete the deal and to expedite a trial to require the same.

M&A opportunities tend to arise from financial crises, as companies fortunes wane and they begin looking to sell. And certainly there are always plenty of savvy buyers circling overhead, eager to take advantage of diminished valuations. Gap acquired Athleta in 2008 during the Great Recessio, and Phillips-Van Heusen acquired Tommy Hilfiger immediately after, in 2010.

The same thing can be expected to happen now. Private equity firms and hedge funds will likely lead the charge on such rescue deals, and certainly they have the resources; Bloomberg estimated that PE firms alone have some $2 trillion at their disposal. They might not swoop in immediately, as they have to tidy up their own portfolios, but they will surely be on the case.

Their targets will no doubt be in the travel, lodging and entertainment sectors, which have taken a major hit during the pandemic with shelter-in-place orders the norm. The World Travel and Tourism Council is predicting a loss of 75 million jobs and $2.1 trillion in revenue, and the U.S. Travel Association projects that 4.6 million people will lose their jobs through May alone. Marriott, meanwhile, serves as an example of how hard-hit the lodging industry has been; that chain had seen a 75 percent reduction in revenue as of early April, a shortfall that the U.S. governments stimulus package can only begin to address.

Also ripe for M&A are industries looking to repair supply chains, once the pandemic is over. Bloomberg pointed to the automotive sector, for example, as one that might be looking to become less dependent on foreign sources for various components.

But again, there are caveats about such things as how a target companys valuation might be impacted by the pandemic (especially given supply-chain disruption) and how decisions made between signing and closing might affect an agreement, given that they are made during such a tumultuous time.

The due diligence process has also been dramatically altered. On-site visits and in-person meetings have taken a backseat to video conference calls, not to mention the trickiness involved with obtaining original documentation in the current climate. Regulatory matters will also be elongated, which may require extending the drop-dead date featured in all agreements (i.e., the date after which either party may walk away from the deal as a result of unforeseen delays).

But there is great uncertainty about all this, as there is with the overall picture, and that uncertainty is as pervasive in the M&A space as any other. The best that can be said is that CEOs who are alert for opportunities, especially in the healthcare and travel sectors, stand to benefit the most.

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The Pandemics Impact On M&AAnd What Will Happen Next - Chief Executive Group

KidSenses to hosts virtual summer camps – The Tryon Daily Bulletin – Tryon Daily Bulletin

Beginning July 13, KidSenses will begin hosting themed, curriculum aligned summer camps for children rising into Kindergarten through the 5th grade. From animals to world travel, there is something exciting for your child to learn about and enjoy. All materials will be provided by the museum as well as passes to local activity and food venues that are able to safely operate under current regulations.

As in previous years, two styles of camps will be offered. Mini camps provide approximately 20 hours of educational fun, while full camps provide up to 40 hours. Prerecorded and live videos will guide your family through all the activities. However, do not feel as if your child has to complete all the activities within the camp week. All the videos will be accessible to registrants even after the camps end, meaning camp activities can continue throughout the entire summer if that works best for your family.

Kindergartners through 2nd graders can explore a downtown environment, searching for clues to solve the mystery of The KidSenses Caper, or they can explore the cultures of the world while eating tasty foreign snacks! 3rd through 5th graders can experience the wild world of animals and the habitats in which they live, or they can blast off with rockets and get messy with slime!

During each camp week, we will host our Fun Fridays for a live, in person activity where campers can participate in activities they cant do at home. Whether its meeting animal ambassadors or eating liquid nitrogen ice cream, it will be an adventure! Fun Friday activities will be scheduled based on registration to ensure that we can adhere to social distancing guidelines.

If your child is one of the first 15 to sign up for each camp, they will receive a free summer camp T-shirt! For the full schedule and details on registration, visit Kidsenses.org/camps.

Due to State guidelines, KidSenses Childrens Interactive Museum is currently closed. However, we are actively posting simple, hands-on activities on our Facebook page. Visit http://www.kidsenses.org or http://www.factorymuseum.org for more information.

Submitted by Marcia Monahan

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KidSenses to hosts virtual summer camps - The Tryon Daily Bulletin - Tryon Daily Bulletin

Expedia 2020 Summer Travel Report Reveals Same-State Stays, Road Trips and Flexibility Pave the Way to Recovery – Hospitality Net

SEATTLE - Summer travel inarguably looks different this summer, and the latest report from Expedia.com sheds light on the emerging priorities and behaviors of Americans looking to get away. Leveraging search and demand data and a national poll of 1,000+ Americans, results from the report include:

"People miss travel, they have vacation days to use and they also want to stay safe," says Senior Director of PR and Social for Expedia.com, Nisreene Atassi. "Given how quickly the advice and restrictions are changing, one of our main priorities at Expedia is making sure our customers have the information they need to navigate this summer travel season."

Read on for more insights and tips from the Expedia 2020 Summer Travel Report.

Summer travelers staying closer to home

Last-minute getaways are also on the rise, with more travelers booking trips 0-7 days out this summer than in previous years.

"While the desire to get away is still going strong for many of us, how and where we're choosing to go this summer looks different," says Atassi. "Beaches and national parks remain popular, but more Americans are choosing destinations that are closer to home and drivable, versus going somewhere more exotic. Interestingly, we've seen that travelers are making these plans at the last minute. Things are so unpredictable right now with COVID-19, so it's possible that travelers feel more comfortable making travel plans for the near future vs. planning too far ahead."

Safety first: road trips seen as the safest way to get away this summer

As travelers venture away from home and destinations open back up to tourism, health and safety takes priority over price when trip-planning. 72 percent of survey respondents said they're opting for a road trip this summer because it feels safer than flying, and more people listed health and safety (72%) and avoiding crowds (68%) as top concerns over budget (60%). In response to these concerns, the industry is rolling out new sanitation measures to help minimize risks. Expedia displays these hygiene amenities on the site so travelers can feel comfortable leaving home; they'll know whether a hotel property has enhanced cleaning processes or if an airline requires passengers to wear face masks.

Travelers can also message their hotel or vacation rental right from the Expedia mobile app and ask for more info on their policies, request special arrangements or check whether certain amenities like the pool or spa are going to be open.

Flexibility

To make it easier to search for flexible options, Expedia lets travelers filter by hotels that offer free cancellation and airlines that are waiving any change fees for future bookings.

"People often choose non-refundable rates because they're generally cheaper, but with so many destinations eager to welcome back tourists it's more realistic than ever to find a great value without having to sacrifice flexibility," says Atassi.

Planning tips and tricks

For more information and inspiration on trip planning, check out the Expedia Viewfinder Blog.

About Expedia.comExpedia.com is one of the world's largest full-service travel sites, helping millions of travelers per month easily plan and book travel. Expedia.com (https://www.expedia.com/, 1-800-EXPEDIA) aims to provide the latest technology and the widest selection of top vacation destinations, affordable airfare, hotel deals, car rentals, destination weddings, cruise deals and in-destination activities, attractions, services and travel apps.

2020 Expedia, Inc., an Expedia Group company. All rights reserved. Expedia and the Airplane logo are trademarks of Expedia, Inc. in the U.S. and/or other countries. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. CST# 2029030-50.

Visit our web site https://www.expedia.com/ or use our mobile app to book cheap flights and hotels.

1Data based on interest or demand on Expedia.com during June 2020 for travel between June 1 - September 7, 2020 compared to the same time periods in 2019.

2Survey commissioned by Expedia and conducted by Survey Monkey, polling 1,077 respondents, aged 18+, located in the U.S.

Expedia Group (NASDAQ: EXPE) is the world's travel platform. We help knock down the barriers to travel, making it easier, more enjoyable, more attainable and more accessible. We are here to bring the world within reach for customers and partners around the globe. We leverage our platform and technology capabilities across an extensive portfolio of businesses and brands to orchestrate the movement of people and the delivery of travel experiences on both a local and global basis. Our family of travel brands includes: Brand Expedia, Hotels.com, Expedia Partner Solutions, Vrbo, Egencia, trivago, HomeAway, Orbitz, Travelocity, Hotwire, Wotif, ebookers, CheapTickets, Expedia Group Media Solutions, Expedia Local Expert, CarRentals.com, Expedia CruiseShipCenters, Classic Vacations, Traveldoo, VacationRentals.com and SilverRail.

2019 Expedia, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and logos are the property of their respective owners. CST: 2029030-50

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Expedia 2020 Summer Travel Report Reveals Same-State Stays, Road Trips and Flexibility Pave the Way to Recovery - Hospitality Net

Global Desert Tourism Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Expedia Group, Booking Holdings (Priceline Group), China Travel, China CYTS…

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Global Desert Tourism Market Projected to Reach USD XX.XX billion by 2025- Expedia Group, Booking Holdings (Priceline Group), China Travel, China CYTS...

26 destinations that are reopening for travel this summer | Etcetera – Daily Hive

As border closures and travel restrictions begin to lift,health authoritiesare reminding individuals to monitor themselves for any signs of COVID-19. If you are feeling unwell, it is recommended you stay at home. If you do decide to travel, follow the health and safety precautions and protocols outlined by the departure and arrival locations you will be traveling to/from.

Following months of lockdowns, governments around the world are preparing or are already engaged in easing various restrictions implemented in response to the COVID-19 global pandemic.

From Iceland to the Florida Keys, locations are gradually adjusting to the current circumstances while doing what they can to plan for the future.

While many regions are still discouraging non-essential travel, destinations that heavily rely on tourism as a primary portion of their economies are instituting strategies to reopen for visitors as soon as possible.

Here is a list of destinations that are aiming to welcome tourists back this summer.

After beginning to ease its lockdown measures on May 4, Italys Council of Ministers announced on May 16 that the country would permit regional travel starting June 3.

In a briefing on May 23,Prime Minister of Spain Pedro Snchez urged all residents to begin planning their holidays for domestic destinations, explaining that they will likely be able to enjoy as of the end of June. Foreign tourists will be permitted to arrive as of July, he stated.

GreekPrime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakisannounced on May 20 that direct international flights from abroad to the countrys tourist destinations would begin gradually starting July 1. Arriving visitors will be required to participate in coronavirus testing upon arrival, and Greeces other health protocols and safety measures will continue to be enforced.

The island paradise of Saint Lucia began a phased approach to restart its tourism sector on June 4. The first phase will start with international flights returning to the Hewanorra International Airport (UVF), but only from the United States to start. Phase 2 of the process will be rolled out to international travelers beginning August 1.

Iceland extended its previous travel restrictions implemented on March 20, past the original date of May 15, one month more to June 15 to comply with the EU Commission recommendation to the Schengen Member States. According to the Government of Icelands website, the country expects to ease restrictions surrounding international arrivals no later than June 15.

According to an update provided to leisure travelers, the US Virgin Islands will enter a phased reopening and will lift travel restrictions on June 1. However, the territorys state of emergency will remain in effect through July 11. Hotels, bed and breakfasts, and short-term rentals such as Airbnb are not allowed to accept guests or reservations prior to June 1.

Georgia will be opening its land and air borders and welcoming visitors back starting July 1. Domestic tourism is set to begin on June 15,along with the creation of safe tourist zones.

The Florida Keys will reopen to leisure travelers beginning June 1, but travelers will be required to follow some additional rules. All arrivals at the Key West International Airport and the Florida Keys International Airport will be subject to coronavirus screening through May 31. A full comprehensive list outlining instructions for travelers can be found on the Florida Keys website.

Portugal plans to reopen its beaches by June 6, the beginning of the bathing season. Flights from outside of the European Union will not be permitted until June 15.

Cyprus will start allowing travelers from multiple countries back starting in June, with qualifying countries being divided into two categories,Category A and Category B. Starting on June 20, visitors from Category A countries will not face any quarantine restrictions.

Jamaicas Minister of Tourism announced that the country would be reopening its borders for the repatriation of citizens as of June 1 and will begin welcoming international travelers as of June 15.

Although an official date has yet to be set, The Maldives Minister of Tourism explained in a statement that the islands were planning on a July reopening of the islands borders.

The Republic of Estonia reopened its borders to European countries on Monday, June 1. Individuals from some of these countries also have the bonus of not having to quarantine once they get there. A comprehensive list of these travelers can be found on the countrys Ministry of Foreign Affairs website.

Regional and international travelers will be permitted to visit the Turks and Caicos Islands as of July 22. The islands Ministry of Tourism and Board of Tourism is working alongside representatives in the tourism industry to create health and safety precautions to ensure the wellbeing of workers and travelers once borders reopen.

The Ministry of Tourism and Aviation of The Bahamas, along with the Tourism Readiness and Recovery Committee, has developed a detailed strategy to reopen its borders and welcome back international visitors starting July 1.

Austria reopened its borders to select neighboring European countries on June 4. It currently has travel warnings issued for 34 countries around the world.

Authorities in French Polynesia recently announced they will reopen the countrys borders to international tourism starting July 15. This decision comes as the health situation is now completely under control.

The Dominican Republic is instituting plans to reopen the countrys borders to welcome back international travelers starting July 1 as part of Phase 4 of its de-escalation process.

Aruba will be reopening its borders to travelers from abroad beginning June 15, when visitors from Bonaire andCuraao will be permitted entry to the island. From there, travelers from the Caribbean except for those coming from the Dominican Republic and Haiti as well as Canada and Europe, will be allowed to visit beginning July 1. Individuals journeying from the United States will be welcomed as of July 10.

Scheduled to take place onJune 15, Switzerlands border restrictionswill be liftedfor neighboring European countries as well as to other countries within the Schengen region.

The Federal Foreign Office of Germany announced that it would be lifting its worldwide travel warning for countries within the European Union, the Schengen countries, and the United Kingdom from June 15, and it will replace it with guidelines for specific countries and regions.

As of June 15, travel between The Netherlands and other countries within the European Union and Schengen area will be permitted. According to the government website, the travel status of these regions will be change from orange (travel not recommended) to yellow (travel is possible, but travelers are advised to keep an eye out for potential risks).

From June 15, travelers arriving from European Union member states as well as Andorra, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Monaco, Norway, San Marino, Switzerland, and the Vatican, will be permitted to enter France without coronavirus-related restrictions. The country will also begin to open its borders to the Schengen Area from July 1.

The Bermuda government announced that the island will resume international commercial air service for travelers beginning July 1 as part of phase four of its economy reopening plan.

Authorities in Malta recently added six more countries to the list of destinations for when the airport officially reopens on July 1. Restrictions surrounding all other flight destinations will be lifted on July 15. The full list of countries can be found online.

All airports within Egypt will resume flights as of July 1 with a detailed strategy to resume other travel and tourism institutions. The government will also be implementing incentives to entice travelers to visit, including removing tourist visas for visitors until October 31.

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26 destinations that are reopening for travel this summer | Etcetera - Daily Hive

American Express Makes History With the First Black Woman on its Executive Committee – Black Enterprise

American Express named President of Strategic Partnerships Glenda McNeal to its Executive Committee this week, making the veteran executive the first Black woman to sit on the Committee.

Having Glendas expertise and experience on the Executive Committee will be a huge asset for us, American Express Chairman and Chief Executive Officer Stephen J. Squeri said in a memo.

During her more 30 years at American Express, McNeal has served in a number of roles across sales and client management, business development, and marketing and strategy. In her current role, she leads strategy and negotiations for key partnerships with the largest e-commerce, travel, technology, and retail companies. Squire added that McNeal has overseen the growth of our relationships with our largest and most critical partners, including Delta, Marriott, Hilton, PayPal and Amazon.

Most recently, McNeal co-led the companys Stand for Small coalition, assembling more than 70 companies across various industries to support small businesses as they work to recover from the impact of COVID-19.

The CEO noted that current challenges to the global economy, including the coronavirus pandemic, are making it even more important to adapt our leadership structure to the challenges we face so that we can emerge in a stronger position and that during these unprecedented times, we must ensure we have the right expertise at the table.

McNeal was added to the Executive Committee along with Andrs Espinosa, Executive Vice President of Enterprise Credit and Fraud Risk Management and Chief Credit Officer for American Express, and Pierric Beckert, President of Global Network Services.

The executives will bring to the Executive Committee invaluable knowledge and experience which are particularly relevant for the times we are in, Squeri said. We will benefit from their diverse perspectives as we navigate through the challenges we face and position our company to win going forward.

McNeal, a member of the B.E. Registry of Corporate Directors, serves on the board of Nordstrom Inc. as well as the boards of RLJ Lodging Trust, the World Travel and Tourism Council, and the United Negro College Fund. A graduate of Dillard University who received her M.B.A. from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania, she is also a member of the Executive Leadership Council.

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American Express Makes History With the First Black Woman on its Executive Committee - Black Enterprise

Which international destinations are reopening to tourists? – CNN

(CNN) Although most governments are still advising against "nonessential" international travel, a host of popular destinations are beginning to ease their Covid-19 lockdown measures and border restrictions and are moving toward welcoming tourists back.

Back in May, the European Union unveiled an action plan to reopen its internal borders in time for summer, while countries such as Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania have formed "travel bubbles," lifting restrictions for each other's citizens.

Some Caribbean islands are already beginning to open their doors to foreign visitors again, while destinations such as Mexico and Thailand are planning to reopen region by region in the coming weeks.

If you're one of many travelers eagerly awaiting news on where you can travel to this year, here's a guide to the top destinations making plans to reopen, as well as some of those that are keeping their borders firmly closed for now.

Aruba

Aruba has issued "tentative" reopening dates, which fall between June 15 and July 1.

LUIS ACOSTA/AFP/Getty Images

However, the visitor's bureau for the Caribbean island, which has reported just over 100 confirmed coronavirus cases, says this "tentative" date may change if Aruba opts to "consider additional precautionary measures as needed."

Although there's no mention of any Covid-19 testing requirements for arrivals, tourists will be required to undergo temperature checks on arrival.

While nonessential businesses including shopping malls, cinemas, beauty salons and outdoor restaurants were allowed to reopen on May 25, the island country's 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew remains in place.

This means such establishments are required to close by 10 p.m. every day.

Bali

At least 6.3 million people visited Bali in 2019.

SONNY TUMBELAKA/AFP via Getty Images

Bali has also been successful in containing its coronavirus outbreak, with less than 350 confirmed cases and, at the time of writing, a total of four deaths.

The Indonesian island now hopes to welcome tourists back by October, provided its infection rates stay low.

Bali's economy is hugely dependent on tourism and visitor numbers have been rising in recent years, with around 6.3 million people visiting in 2019.

All foreign nationals, except for diplomats, permanent residents and humanitarian workers, are currently banned from Indonesia, and anyone entering the island must undergo a swab test and provide a letter stating they are free of Covid-19.

It's unclear what the entry requirements will be if restrictions are lifted later this year, or whether Bali will accept travelers from regions badly affected by the pandemic.

Cyprus

Cyprus has pledged to cover holiday costs for Covid-19-positive tourists and their families.

Courtesy Cyprus Tourism Organisation

Cyprus is so keen to get its tourism industry back on track, officials are offering to cover the costs of any travelers who test positive for Covid-19 while on vacation in the Mediterranean island nation.

According to a letter shared with CNN, the Cypriot government will pay for lodging, as well as food, drink and medication for tourists who are taken ill with coronavirus during their visit.

The detailed plan was set out in a five-page letter issued to governments, airlines and tour operators on May 26.

Officials have also earmarked a 100-bed hospital for foreign travelers who test positive, while a 500-room "quarantine hotel" will be available to patients' family and "close contacts."

"The traveler will only need to bear the cost of their airport transfer and repatriation flight, in collaboration with their agent and/or airline," states the letter.

The country's hotels began to reopen on June 1, while international air travel restarted on June 9.

Once the destination reopens, visitors from only chosen countries will be allowed to enter.

Incoming flights from Greece, Malta, Bulgaria, Norway, Austria, Finland, Slovenia, Hungary, Israel, Denmark, Germany, Slovakia and Lithuania will be authorized first.

From June 20, Cyprus will also permit incoming flights from Switzerland, Poland, Romania, Croatia, Estonia and the Czech Republic.

However, the list is to be expanded to include furthe23r countries in the coming months.

Travelers heading to Cyprus will need to provide a valid certificate proving they've tested negative for Covid-19, while they'll be subject to temperature checks on arrival as well as testing at random during the course of their trip.

The destination has already put measures in place to protect travelers and residents, such as ensuring hotel staff wear masks and gloves, regularly disinfecting sunbeds and keeping tables at restaurants, bars, cafs,and pubs at least two meters (6.5 feet) apart.

Egypt

International flights to Egypt are likely to recommence during June and July.

MOHAMED EL-SHAHED/AFP via Getty Images

The government suspended passenger flights back in March, while all hotels, restaurants and cafes were closed and a night curfew imposed.

These measures are currently being relaxed, with hotels that meet certain requirements, such as having a clinic with a resident doctor on site, being granted permission to reopen for domestic visitors at a reduced capacity.

"A number of global carriers have expressed willingness to resume flights to Egypt in July, and as a result we are considering a gradual resumption of international flights beginning towards the end of this month and in the first half of July."

France

Residents of France will be allowed to take holidays within the country during July and August.

DAMIEN MEYER/AFP via Getty Images

France was the most visited country in the world before the coronavirus pandemic.

Now, like the rest of the EU, restrictions are currently in place on all nonessential travel from outside the Schengen Zone (a grouping of 26 countries which normally have open borders).

Travelers who do enter the country, with the exception of EU citizens or arrivals from the UK, will be subject to a compulsory 14-day quarantine until at least July 24.

"Since the start of the crisis, the closure of the borders is the rule, and the authorization to cross a border is the exception.

"What is good for tourism is often good for France, what strikes tourism strikes France," he said during a news conference.

The country's hotels, bars, restaurants and cafs were granted permission to reopen on June 2.

Meanwhile Paris was downgraded from a "red zone" to a "green zone" in mid-June

It was announced on May 29 that the country's most visited museum, the Louvre, will reopen July 6.

"Tourism is facing what is probably its worst challenge in modern history," added Philippe. "Because this is one of the crown jewels of the French economy, rescuing it is a national priority."

He went on to state that residents can take holidays within France during July and August.

The country's hotels will be reliant on domestic tourism once they do reopen, as all signs suggest international travelers will not be able to enter for the foreseeable future.

"When the lockdown measures soften, French tourists are likely to want to stay close to home in the short term," a spokesperson for French hotel chain Accor told CNN Travel earlier this month.

"It will be the moment for them to rediscover their own country and we will be there to welcome them."

Georgia

Georgia aims to welcome back international travelers from July 1.

VANO SHLAMOV/AFP via Getty Images

But the country was forced to close its winter resorts and place a ban on all foreign visitors back in March because of the crisis.

Eager to revive its tourism sector, the country's government says it plans to reopen to international travelers on July 1.

The next stage will allow for domestic travel in special "safe" tourism zones, while the final stage involves reopening borders and resuming some flights.

"[The] tourism sector will be first to which emergency relief measures will apply."

Germany

Restrictions in Germany are being gently relaxed as the country prepares to revive its tourism industry.

JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP via Getty Images

Although nonessential travel to Germany is prohibited at present, the land of poets and thinkers lifted restrictions for EU countries on June 15.

Officials are also considering allowing entry to visitors from Turkey, the UK, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Switzerland, although a final decision is yet to be made.

"The revitalization of tourism is important both for travelers and the German travel industry, as well as for the economic stability of the respective target countries," it reads.

The Austria/Germany land border is also reopening -- travel between Austria and Germany is possible as of June 15 -- and restrictions around the country are being relaxed.

Greece

Officials in Greece are hoping to reopen the country on June 15.

cunfek/Getty Images

Tourism accounts for almost 20% of Greece's gross domestic product, as well as one in five jobs, so it's perhaps no surprise the Mediterranean nation is angling to reopen to tourists as soon as it possibly can.

The European country, which managed to keep its coronavirus case numbers low by implementing a strict lockdown early on, has already begun to allow some travelers back in.

"The tourism period begins on June 15, when seasonal hotels can reopen," Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis announced on May 20.

"Let us make this summer the epilogue of the [Covid-19] crisis," he added.

However, Tourism Minister Haris Theoharis has indicated health officials will conduct spot tests when necessary.

"Maybe no bars may be open, or no tight crowds, but you can still get a fantastic experience in Greece -- provided that the global epidemic is on a downward path."

The 29 countries are Albania, Australia, Austria, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Germany, Denmark, Switzerland, Estonia, Japan, Israel, China, Croatia, Cyprus, Latvia, Lebanon, New Zealand, Lithuania, Malta, Montenegro, Norway, South Korea, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia, Slovenia, Czech Republic and Finland.

Bars and restaurants have also been allowed to take up business again, while city hotels were scheduled to reopen on June 1, followed by seasonal hotels in July.

All international passengers had previously been required to take a Covid-19 test upon arrival or go into quarantine for 14 days.

Mitsotakis had suggested tourists would be required to undergo testing before their visit as a further precaution in the future, but it seems this is only the case for travelers from countries that aren't on the list, which is based on a document from the European Union Aviation Safety Agency of airports worldwide "located in affected areas with high risk of transmission of the Covid-19 infection."

Iceland

Iceland has already begun to welcome back visitors.

LOIC VENANCE/AFP via Getty Images

Iceland reopened it borders to tourists on June 15 after recording just under 2,000 confirmed Covid-19 cases.

The move came weeks after the Nordic country banned all foreign nationals, except for nationals of the EU and associated European countries.

Up until recently, everyone arriving from outside the country was required to go into quarantine for 14 days.

However, travelers now have the option to either submit to a Covid-19 test on arrival, provide proof of a recently taken test with a negative result, or agree to a two-week quarantine.

"When travelers return to Iceland we want to have all mechanisms in place to safeguard them and the progress made in controlling the pandemic," Thordis Kolbrun Reykfjord Gylfadottir, Minister of Tourism, Industry and Innovation said in an official statement last month.

"Iceland's strategy of large-scale testing, tracing and isolating have proven effective so far.

" We want to build on that experience of creating a safe place for those who want a change of scenery after what has been a tough spring for all of us."

Italy

Italy is dropping its compulsory quarantine for arrivals in a "calculated risk" to entice tourists back.

PIERO CRUCIATTI/AFP via Getty Images

Italy has been one of the destinations worst hit by the pandemic, but the hugely popular European country is keen to get its tourism industry up and running now that infection rates have slowed down.

Travelers from the EU, along with the UK and the microstates and principalities of Andorra, Monaco, San Marino and the Vatican, were allowed to enter without having to go into quarantine starting June 3, in a move the government has described as a "calculated risk."

"We have to accept it; otherwise, we will never be able to start up again."

Visitors were previously required to undergo a two-week quarantine before being allowed entry.

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Which international destinations are reopening to tourists? - CNN

Boom in all-inclusive holidays as skiers look for security and luxury in post-pandemic world – Telegraph.co.uk

Club Med looks to a future of on-site doctors and private chalets as it ditches buffets

The coronavirus has thrown the entire worlds travel plans into turmoil. Yet while some operators struggle to stay afloat others are beginning to see a light at the end of the tunnel.

Luxury all-inclusive ski holidays is one boom area as skiers look towards the hope of returning to the slopes next winter.

The boss of all-inclusive specialist Club Med has revealed its sales are up, compared to the same period last year, providing a lifeline to the company that, like many, lost a huge proportion of business when the pandemic suspended all global travel, including the cancellation of thousands of ski holidays.

The pandemic forced us to close all of our ski resorts in Europe and Asia from late March, which essentially meant we missed a third of the 2019/2020 ski season, explained Estelle Giraudeau, managing director UK and Northern Europe at Club Med

But as the world eases out of lockdown, countries reopen their borders and holidaymakers look to the potential future of travel, Club Meds fortunes have changed, offering a glimpse at what ski holidays of the future might look like. In recent weeks, we have seen a surge from UK customers looking for premium all-inclusive holidays, said Giraudeau, who reveals revenue last week was up 33 per cent year on year.

It is the brands five-star and luxury resorts and residences that are leading the charge, she said. Many in the ski industry believe luxury holidays could boom in the post-pandemic world as customers look for top-of-the-range cleaning standards, professional services such as contactless chalet hosts and catering and private spaces where they can socially distance from other holidaymakers. People are demanding privacy and space in the current climate and our chalets and 5T spaces offer both, with the added advantage of resort facilities and activities on your doorstep, said Giraudeau.

The company has revealed the average value of new online bookings has risen by 26 per cent year on year, due to more customers booking its 5T resorts (Club Med's own star rating system) and private properties part of its Exclusive Collection.

Last winter Club Med began its first foray into the world of luxury ski chalets in the French resort of Samons, on the doorstep of its Grand Massif Samons Morillon all-inclusive resort hotel. In these new properties the Club Med formula, where all meals and drinks, every day, are included in the price, is the same as in its hotels. But as well as the option of eating in a hotel restaurant, guests staying in chalets also enjoy the services of a host called a Chalet Master, and can have food served in the privacy of their accommodation, mimicking the traditional British chalet model.

Giraudeau believes pent up demand to go on holiday is also helping to drive sales in the luxury sector, as well as surplus cash to spend by those that have not been financially impacted by Covid-19. They are prepared to spend more to make sure that their holiday is everything they have been dreaming of during lockdown, she said.

Club Med has long been the market leader in all-inclusive ski holiday packages, which, for a single price, cover everything from meals, drinks, lessons, lift passes, flights and transfers. It believes its all-in-one approach and global reputation will be appealing to customers who are now more cautious about who and which operators they spend their money and book with.

This [the all-inclusive model] is more important than ever now - with prices and currencies fluctuating in these uncertain times, locking in a price can provide peace of mind, said Giraudeau. Industry research recently revealed that refund guarantees, package deals and Atol and Abta bonding will be among the major influences skiers to book in the future.

Club Meds packages negate the need to spend extra, often large amounts, on ski holiday essentials such as lift passes and lessons the only thing it does not include in its deals is equipment hire, which can be booked separately through onsite hire shops.

All-inclusive ski holidays with Club Med have always had the advantage of knowing that youre not going to be hit with lots of additional costs after booking. All of your flights, transfers, food and drinks, ski passes, ESF lessons, resort activities and kids clubs over the age of four are included in the upfront cost, said Giraudeau.

While many resorts in Europe are looking to their cousins in the southern hemisphere, which plan to begin their ski season in the coming weeks, global brand Club Med has its own experience to learn from. Its properties in ski resorts in China have already been permitted to reopen, providing a blueprint for the companys future. Club Med opened its first ski school in the country last year.

We have been able to open up all our resorts in China, including those in ski domains Yabuli and Beidahu, over the past few months and their occupancy rates for April, May and June are higher than the same period last year which gives us strong hope that travel will rebound once restrictions are lifted in different countries, said Giraudeau.

Club Med does have the advantage of two months of experience in managing and operating resorts with reinforced and adapted health measures thanks to the many lessons learned from the reopening of our Club Med resorts in China.

The company has drawn up a list of extensive measures it plans to bring in across all its all-inclusive resorts, which will initially rewelcome domestic visitors and then guests from all over Europe as borders reopen and lockdowns are lifted.

Customers will notice new measures in place from the moment they are collected from the airport when transfer coaches and taxis will run on reduced capacity and, on arrival at the property, check in and arrival services are turning digital to reduce queues. During their stay restaurant opening times will be extended, cleaning and disinfection, particularly in spas, kids clubs, lifts and restaurants, will be increased and Club Med will also have an on-site doctor available at each resort, tasked with providing first aid in the event of someone developing symptoms while in the hotel.

The biggest challenge to reopening our resorts are the stringent measures we have to put in place to provide the best possible health and hygiene conditions. We have spent lockdown developing our Safe Together protocol, validated by our scientific committee comprised of professors, doctors and experts in epidemiology and public health, said Giraudeau.

Despite new measures inevitably changing elements of the holiday experience, from check in to dining and time spent on the slopes, Giraudeau is keen to insist the brand will be sticking as closely as possible to the Club Med experience thousands have grown to love. These measures are designed to protect everyone while retaining spaces and activities that are faithful to the Club Med label and experience, she said.

Ski lessons with fully-qualified local instructors will still be part of the all-inclusive package but group size will be limited. Off the slopes its spas, many of which boast impressive facilities and extensive treatment lists, will reopen but under new protocols.

Club Meds dining options are among the most popular parts of its packages, especially for families who enjoy the wide choice, flexibility and low-cost approach of all meals being provided all usually served in buffet style. However as this style of dining becomes a thing of the past Club Med are having to make a big change. Our buffets will be replaced with staff service, however, we are continuing to offer our guests as much choice as possible with cuisines from all around the world which we know is a much-loved aspect of the Club Med experience, said Giraudeau.

Opening hours of its restaurants will also be extended and tables will be spaced at safe distances apart.

The coronavirus pandemic struck as Club Med entered another year of its vast expansion plan. In the past few years it has opened several new residences and has plans to continue its growth even further. A global pandemic wont stop this says Giraudeau, despite some operators scaling back their offerings. Club Med is continuing its expansion plan and will be opening the newly renovated 4T La Palmyre Atlantique resort on 12th July, Club Med Sainte Anne in the Seychelles, its first ever 5T private eco-island, in Q4, and its latest Alpine ski resort in the historic village of La Rosiere in December.

Its growth does not stop there in 2021 it will open its first resort in Canada, the hotly anticipated Quebec Charlevoix as well as other new residences in China, Africa, Italy and Thailand among others in the next five years. Many would consider this a brave strategy, considering current trading conditions, but the brand says its loyal customers who pay for its premium services are driving its expansion and as demand grows so does its empire.

Premium customers drove a significant proportion of our growth in the past few years which is why we have such an ambitious roadmap of new 4-Trident and 5-Trident Exclusive Collection resorts, said Giraudeau.

Club Med UK had an outstanding year in 2019 and we are confident that people are still dreaming of their next holiday and we will see strong demand returning in the near future.

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Boom in all-inclusive holidays as skiers look for security and luxury in post-pandemic world - Telegraph.co.uk

Tony Robinson takes house-bound viewers Around The World By Train – Stuff.co.nz

In an era when international tourism is limited, it feels a bit strange to be chatting to someone about a travel show.

But then again, watching Sir Tony Robinson explore the world with child-like wonder in Around The World By Train is a nice piece of escapism particularly for anyone who is missing the thrill of overseas travel.

READ MORE:* Sir Tony Robinson, walking through history* Why Sir Tony Robinson will always be grateful to Blackadder* Sir Tony Robinson's Tour Of Duty

Everybody has been so kind of gloomy quite understandably, says Robinson.

I was so pleased that this could come out at a time when its great to lift peoples spirits, lift peoples hearts and say there is still a world out there.

There are still wonderful things to see and at some time, and hopefully in the not-too-distant future, well be seeing them again.

So no, I didnt feel it was inappropriate at all. I felt that it was highly appropriate like a celebration of who we have been and who we can be in the future.

Supplied

On his travels through the United States in Around The World By Train, Tony Robinson visits a dude ranch.

In the show, 73-year-old Robinson travels via rail in Europe, Asia, Australia, and the United States.

If you are wondering what the advantage of travelling by train is as opposed to being transported by ship or plane, Robinson has a few theories.

When youre going on a cruise ship, you are going really pretty slowly, he says.

A lot of the time, youre either going to be eating in the restaurant or sitting in your cabin.

On a plane, youre just whizzing from one place to another. But on a train, youve got your eyes out of the window all the time. Even on a long-distance train youre stopping quite a lot. Its a really good and very civilised way to travel.

One of the most exciting things is that all around the world, rail travel is being rediscovered.

From the sort of 1960s to the 1980s it was as though train travel was rusting under our feet.

But now people are realising what a wonderful way of travelling it is.

I got the privilege of travelling in some of the swankiest trains in the world and some of the roughest trains in the world.

Robinson was particularly impressed by trains in Japan and Europe.

There is a very good train network in Europe, he says.

For young Kiwis who havent been over there yet, look at the train journeys throughout Europe, if youre going to come over.

You can get to such a variety of places so quickly and comfortably and cheaply compared to a lot of other travel. So I really would recommend it.

Like a lot of people in the arts and entertainment industry, Robinson, whose CV includes the comedy Black Adder and factual series such as Britains Ancient Tracks and Coast To Coast, was affected on a professional level when the global pandemic hit the UK.

I had about 14 months of work ahead of me but it all just went overnight, he says.

But he did have something else to occupy him.

Three days before lockdown, my wife and I decided to get a rescue dog, says Robinson of their new pooch, Holly Berry.

We got a westie (west highland terrier) from the RSPCA (in Derby). We brought it back to London.

We fell in love with her and she fell in love with us straight away. She needed an awful lot of attention, an awful lot of care. But weve got the time to do that. So gradually we turned her back into a playful, wonderful dog. So she has been the focus of our lives.

Supplied

Tony Robinson in Around The World By Train

Robinson has also used the time to focus on his health by doing workouts using gym equipment.

Ive been exercising like mad, he says.

Whereas all my mates are getting p***ed every day, I came off booze and Ive been exercising all the time. For two years now Ive been doing Around The World By Train.

The demands of the show meant there wasnt a lot of time to exercise.

I was looking at myself in the mirror and I didnt like what I saw at all, he says.

So Ive actually lost 20lbs (9kg).

With the UKs lockdown restrictions slowly easing, Robinson will be returning to work later this month when he resumes filming on a second season of The Thames: Britains Great River With Tony Robinson.

As in previous factual shows, such as Ancient Tracks, he will be getting around on foot.

With a touch of excitement, Robinson says, I will have to dust off my walking shoes.

Around The World By Train, TVNZ 1, Thursday July 2

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Tony Robinson takes house-bound viewers Around The World By Train - Stuff.co.nz

Experiential Travels Market Expected to Witness the Highest Growth 2025 – Jewish Life News

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Experiential Travels Market Expected to Witness the Highest Growth 2025 - Jewish Life News

The end of tourism? | Travel – The Guardian

Of all the calamities that befell tourists as the coronavirus took hold, those involving cruise ships stood apart. Contagion at sea inspired a special horror, as pleasure palaces turned into prison hulks, and rumours of infection on board spread between fetid cabins via WhatsApp. Trapped in close proximity to their fellow passengers, holidaymakers experienced the distress of being both victims and agents of infection, as a succession of ports refused them entry.

When it began, the deadly situation at sea was seen as a freakish outgrowth of what many still thought of as a Chinese problem. The first ship to suffer a major outbreak was the Diamond Princess. By mid-February, 355 cases had been confirmed aboard, and the ship was held being in quarantine in the port of Yokohama. At the time, the ship accounted for more than half of reported cases outside China. Fourteen passengers on the Diamond Princess would die of the virus.

The nightmare at sea has not concluded. Even after passengers from more than 30 afflicted cruise ships were allowed to disembark, and flooded into hospitals, quarantine hotels or on to charter flights home, an estimated 100,000 crew and staff remained trapped at sea, some in quarantine, others blocked from disembarking until their employers could make onward travel arrangements. This second drama led to a mass hunger strike by 15 Romanian crew in limbo off the coast of Florida and a police intervention to quell disturbances on a ship quarantined in the German port of Cuxhaven. As recently as 1 June, crew and staff aboard 20-odd cruise ships marooned in Manila Bay were reportedly clamouring to be allowed ashore.

Cruises have become a symbol of the ravages that coronavirus has inflicted on tourism. A sector that until January was worth $150bn, by its own estimate, is shedding jobs, issuing debt and discounting furiously simply to survive. But even before the current crisis hit, cruising had become symptomatic of the damage that tourism wreaks on the world.

Tourism is an unusual industry in that the assets it monetises a view, a reef, a cathedral do not belong to it. The worlds dominant cruise companies Carnival, Royal Caribbean and Norwegian pay little towards the upkeep of the public goods they live off. By incorporating themselves in overseas tax havens with benign environmental and labour laws respectively Panama, Liberia and Bermuda cruisings big three, which account for three-quarters of the industry, get to enjoy low taxes and avoid much irksome regulation, while polluting the air and sea, eroding coastlines and pouring tens of millions of people into picturesque ports of call that often cannot cope with them.

What goes for cruises goes for most of the travel industry. For decades, a small number of environmentally minded reformists in the sector have tried to develop sustainable tourism that creates enduring employment while minimising the damage it does. But most hotel groups, tour operators and national tourism authorities whatever their stated commitment to sustainable tourism continue to prioritise the economies of scale that inevitably lead to more tourists paying less money and heaping more pressure on those same assets. Before the pandemic, industry experts were forecasting that international arrivals would rise by between 3% and 4% in 2020. Chinese travellers, the largest and fastest-growing cohort in world tourism, were expected to make 160m trips abroad, a 27% increase on the 2015 figure.

The virus has given us a picture, at once frightening and beautiful, of a world without tourism. We see now what happens to our public goods when tourists arent clustering to exploit them. Shorelines enjoy a respite from the erosion caused by cruise ships the size of canyons. Walkers stuck at home cannot litter mountainsides. Intricate culinary cultures are no longer menaced by triangles of defrosted pizza. It is hard to imagine a better illustration of tourisms effects than our current holiday away from it.

Coronavirus has also revealed the danger of overreliance on tourism, demonstrating in brutal fashion what happens when the industry supporting an entire community, at the expense of any other more sustainable activity, collapses. On 7 May, the UN World Tourism Organisation estimated that earnings from international tourism might be down 80% this year against last years figure of $1.7tn, and that 120m jobs could be lost. Since tourism relies on the same human mobility that spreads disease, and will be subject to the most stringent and lasting restrictions, it is likely to suffer more than almost any other economic activity.

As tourisms impact on the world has deepened, so the global economy has come to depend on it. Now, after the freeze forced upon foreign travel unimaginable even six months ago we have a rare opportunity to extract ourselves from this destructive cycle, and do things differently.

To accusations that it is spoiling the planet, the tourism industry responds with an economic argument: one in 10 jobs in the world depend on it. Governments tend to like tourism, because it creates jobs in the time it takes a hotel to open and the hot water to come on and it brings in plenty of foreign money.

One industry advocate I spoke to quoted Lelei Lelaulu, a development entrepreneur who, in 2007, described tourism as the largest voluntary transfer of cash from the rich to the poor, the haves to have nots, in history. Even if one allows for considerable leakage whereby much of tourists expenditure doesnt go to the destination country but to foreign tour agencies, airlines and hotel chains whose services they use it cannot be denied that Australians have spent liberally in Bali, Americans in Cancn and Chinese in Bangkok.

At the end of January, when the flow of Chinese tourists to Europe dried up, Melissa Biggs Bradley the founder of Indagare, a high-end US travel company, and a board member of the Center for Responsible Travel was called by Italian colleagues who warned her: Rome is empty. You have no idea how devastating this is going to be. In those early days of the crisis, industry analysts reached for reassuring precedents. In 2009, international tourist arrivals fell by 4% as a result of the global financial crisis. The following year the industry roared back with 6.7% growth. After a series of terrorist attacks in Turkey in 2016, tourists stayed away, but Turkeys loss was Spains gain, and the Costa Blanca experienced a surge in arrivals.

It soon became clear that such comparisons were little help in understanding a global disease without a cure. In late March, Bernstein, a leading research firm, sent a note to investors that replaced an earlier, merely gloomy assessment of the hotel industrys prospects with a properly cataclysmic one. Just two weeks ago we considered 80% revenue declines highly unlikely, and now adopt it as our base case, the note ran. How naive we were! And that was before room occupation in Spain and Italy bottomed out at 5%.

Tourism accounts for around 15% of Spains GDP and some 13% of Italys. But painful though its loss is for the most diversified economies in southern Europe, it is life-threatening for tourisms dependencies, such as the Maldives, where tourism contributes around a third of GDP, or for emerging destinations like Georgia, where visitor numbers have more than quadrupled in the past decade.

In April, Edmund Bartlett, the tourism minister of Jamaica where the industry brings in more than 50% of the islands foreign currency bemoaned the fact that there had been zero arrivals for Montego Bays airport, zero arrivals for Kingstons airport and zero guests in hotels on top of the 300,000 people who are without jobs because all of the transportation systems that support tourism are at a halt, [because] the farmers who support tourism have nowhere to sell their crops, [because] the attractions are closed.

For all the money the industry usually brings in, one of the prices of allowing a place to be taken over by tourism is the way it distorts local development. Farmers sell their land to the hotel chain, only for the price of crops they once grew to inflate beyond their reach. Water is diverted to the golf course while the locals go short. The road is paved as far as the theme park, not the school. In its subordination of an economy to a powerful, capricious, external motor, tourism dependency has something in common with the aid dependency that I observed as a reporter in Afghanistan after the 2001 invasion. In both cases, the worst threat is the possibility of sudden withdrawal.

Biggs Bradley pointed to a number of small, vulnerable places that will be devastated, such as those islands in the Pacific that have recently become popular with diving tour operators. They were opened up by the phenomenal rise in new air routes of recent years, she said, only for the planes to stop arriving, leaving debt and unemployment behind.

Tsotne Japaridze, whose tour agency Traffic Travel organises adventure holidays in Georgia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, described the pain that the virus inflicted on his business and those who rely on it. Japaridze employs three people full-time, hires 15 guides and drivers during the summer season, and sends tour groups to 30-odd vineyards, guesthouses and private houses around the country. His company can be seen as a powerful core diffusing revenue that supports hundreds of people. At the start of the crisis, Japaridze put his employees on unpaid leave (It was a difficult decision but I had no option, he said). As tourism vanished, demand has exploded for services that do not require customers to leave their homes. One of Japaridzes former guides, who used to take tour groups to the beautiful Svaneti region of Georgia, is now making ends meet by delivering food on his motorbike.

If one danger of tourism dependency is that the tourists might suddenly stop arriving, a more common problem is overtourism the saturation of a destination by visitors in numbers it cannot sustain. Near the peak of the pandemic, I spoke by Zoom to Jane da Mosto, whose NGO, We Are Here Venice, fights valiantly to keep the most noxiously over-touristed place on earth a tolerable place to live.

While chopping vegetables for the family supper, Da Mosto confessed to a certain unease at the juxtaposition of apocalypse in Italian hospitals and the scenes of serenity and quiet observable from her window. The bridges were empty and seahorses cavorted in the Grand Canal, while peddlers of phallic-shaped pasta had been replaced by boatmen delivering homemade tortellini to the citys residents.

When Da Mosto moved out of view to attend to her potatoes, her place was occupied by her 19-year-old son, Pierangelo. From the day he first slid behind the wheel of his fathers boat, Pierangelo has lived for the water, and he feels queasy if obliged to sit in a car. He works as a carpenter and a restorer of the citys famous keel-less boats, while also beetling about on an electric launch and showing tourists Venice from a Venetian perspective.

A Venetian who acknowledges the importance of tourism but longs to relax its grip, Pierangelo and his friends designers, students, fellow carpenters had been discussing life after the virus, when, with fewer visitors, they would be faced with a steep drop in income, and would be obliged to make up the shortfall by drumming up business from local residents.

And how, I asked, does he feel when hes bobbing on the Giudecca Canal and turns to see a cruise ship bearing down on him?

Small, Pierangelo smiled. Very small.

Were it not for tourism, much of Venices Gothic fabric would have crumbled or been redeveloped years ago. But while the tourism industry provided much of the economic rationale for the preservation of the citys architecture, power was handed to investors in hotels, restaurants and boats, many of them outsiders for whom Venice was simply a business opportunity. On 15 July 1989, the global music industry commandeered the city for a free concert, the memory of which vexes Venetians even now. As many as 200,000 people from all over Europe converged that day on the Piazza San Marco, the citys spiritual and aesthetic core, some of them packed on to boats offshore, to see Pink Floyd on the final leg of their world tour.

Panicky city councillors argued almost until the opening note of Shine on You Crazy Diamond about whether the concert should go ahead. In the end, the band agreed to lower the decibels and shorten their playlist to fit global TV schedules (Italian national broadcaster Rai did very nicely), while shopkeepers around the square sold warm beer at triple the price to fans who discovered too late that the authorities hadnt laid on a single toilet. The following morning, the famous old flagstones were covered by cans, cigarette butts and puddles of urine.

As an example of tourism squatting on the public good, an invasion of a medieval city centre by 200,000 people who pay no entry fee and leave the city to clear up their mess is hard to beat. One Italian TV report described the concert as a violation of human rights, those of the invaders and those of the invaded. So virulent was criticism of the city council that its members resigned en masse.

Long before the invasion by rock fans, residents had been deserting the city. Between 1950 and 2019, Venices population dropped from about 180,000 to nearer 50,000, while the number of annual visitors rose from 1 million to 30 million. According to Jan van der Borg, a tourism specialist who teaches at Venices Ca Foscari University, and advises tourism authorities across Europe, this exceeds the citys carrying capacity, the number it can accommodate without permanently damaging its infrastructure and way of life, by at least 10 million.

Whether it is a gondola owner who lives far away and deputes someone else to row tourists through the packed canals, or the budget airlines that deposit thousands of tourists every day in an area barely one and a half times the size of New Yorks Central Park, in Da Mostos words, a huge number of people live off Venice without living in it.

And, says Van der Borg, the tourists are the wrong kind. Some 70% are day-trippers, who after being spat from their tour buses, cruise ships and airplanes, spend a few hours congesting the historic heart of Venice but without contributing to its maintenance. After parting with perhaps 15, enough to buy them a souvenir manufactured thousands of miles away, they are hurried by their guide on to their next destination.

According to the unapologetic elitism that informs the thinking of Van der Borg and other industry strategists, high-impact, low-value excursionists should be made less welcome than the affluent independent travellers who stay in a hotel, eat at neighbourhood restaurants and perhaps round off a day in the citys lesser-known churches with a bellini at Harrys Bar like Truman Capote before them. At every step, runs this line of reasoning, quality tourists contribute to the citys wellbeing through taxes, tips and human interaction.

So is the package holiday on the way out? According to a UK trend report by Abta in 2019, people considering their next holiday abroad were looking, above all, to spend less. If the budget holidaymaker is to be given a lukewarm welcome, British tourists have not got the hint.

In the past 10 years, the curse of Venetianisation the hollowing out of a place, as it fills with tourist-termites has beset city after city, as budget airlines and Airbnb have brought a weekend somewhere cobbled within reach of millions. That hasnt just meant long-established destinations such as Venice or Paris, but sleepy coastal towns such as Porto, on Portugals Atlantic coast, that were completely unprepared for the numbers of tourists unleashed on them.

The fightback can be dated to July 2015, when the city council in Barcelona whose famous promenade, La Rambla, had been rendered all but impassable by the sheer number of tourists introduced a moratorium on new hotels. The following year Airbnb was served a 600,000 fine for listing unlicensed properties small beer for a company whose revenues from a single quarter have been known to exceed $1bn, but a sign of growing hostility towards an industry that could make a city unrecognisable to its residents in a short space of time.

Last year, the mayor of Dubrovnik whose perfectly preserved old town was overrun by visitors after it featured in the TV adaptation of Game of Thrones shut 80% of the souvenir stalls clogging up the city centre and imposed a quota on bus and cruise tourists. The Belgian canal city of Bruges recently moved to limit the number of cruise ships docking at any one time and halted all advertising aimed at daytrippers.

There is, of course, a financial cost to limiting tourism. As Fermn Villar, the president of the Friends of La Rambla, which represents the streets residential and commercial interests, told the Guardian two years ago, La Rambla is above all a business every year more than 100 million people walk along this street. Imagine, he enthused, if each person spends only 1. But mass tourism displaces other businesses, while the exodus of many creative and productive residents, as well as the stress placed on local infrastructure by visitors in such numbers, carry a cost of their own. Da Mosto told me that, in purely economic terms, Venice is a net loser from an industry that has set up shop on its premises and remits much of its revenues elsewhere.

Behind the recent campaigns against over-tourism lies a growing appreciation that public goods that were assumed to be endlessly exploitable are, in fact, both finite and have a value that the price of visiting them should reflect. Polluter pays is an economic principle that is gradually being introduced to farming, manufacturing and energy. The idea is that if your business produces harmful side effects, then you should be the one who picks up the tab for the cleanup operation. Something similar, incorporating not only environmental harm but also wider cultural degradation or damage to way of life, might become the guiding principle of a properly sustainable tourism industry. At present the focus is centred narrowly on tourism taxes, which aim to reduce the number of tourists while also bringing in more revenue. Modest though they remain Amsterdam adds 7% to your room bill in addition to a flat 3 per person per night they are the tentative beginnings of a trend towards controlling tourism and turning it to the locals advantage, rather than the other way around.

A certain nimbleness is required of companies that make money out of tourism but do not want to be seen as blind to its effects. The guide book publisher Fodors issues an annual no list of destinations that people should altruistically abstain from visiting. This years list features Easter Island and the Cambodian temple complex of Angkor Wat. Meanwhile Fodors also promotes twenty-five places to see in the US before you die. That list includes Big Sur, a stretch of Californian coastline that was recently festooned with a banner reading Overtourism is killing Big Sur.

Gazing at the distant profile of Mount Kenya from lightly chlorinated water in the African bush might seem like a bearable way to sit out the crisis, but the infinity pool at the Loisaba tented camp, one of three safari lodges in a 23,000-hectare reserve of the same name, hasnt seen a swimmer in months. Less than a month after flights into the country were suspended on 25 March, Loisabas CEO, a Kenyan veteran of bush tourism called Tom Silvester, told me that he had laid off 90 employees, and with each job around here carrying up to 10 dependents, thats a big impact.

The damage done by the collapse of Kenyas tourism industry, which is worth $1.6bn and employs 1.6 million people, is fearsome. After shuttering 24 properties across east Africa, Elewana, the hotel company that operates Loisabas three lodges, is drawing on cash reserves to support its 2,000-odd employees and their families. The website of another reserve, the Nashulai, is emblazoned with a plea for donations to combat starvation among the communities that rely on it.

While in many places getting rid of tourists may be the only way to restore a healthy natural world, in countries where the tourist industry focuses on the environment, the opposite may be true. When I suggested to Karim Wissanji, Elewanas CEO, that the best way to conserve Africas wildlife might be for human beings to migrate to the cities and leave them in peace, he retorted: The future of our wildlife and their habitats are intrinsically linked to the future of the safari adventure industry.

Three-quarters of the 2 million foreign tourists who came to Kenya last year came for the wildlife. Were it not for tourism, many of the 160 private reserves that provide vital corridors for migrating animals and excess grazing capacity for the countrys national parks would revert to being hunting grounds or be turned over for agriculture, threatening one of the greatest concentrations of animal life in the world. Competition for grazing land, especially during times of drought, has intensified long-standing conflict between the needs of local communities and the regions unique wildlife. As Paula Kahumbu, the CEO of conservation organisation Wildlife Direct, wrote in the Guardian, most Kenyan youth see wildlife as irrelevant, something that benefits a few, rich visitors or white landowners. In the wake of violent incursions on ranches and wildlife parks over the years, safari outfits have looked for ways to make tourism directly support the local population.

The loss of incomes caused by the pandemic might yet precipitate disaster. On 21 April, Conservation International, a US charity that protects areas of exceptional biodiversity, reported that there has been an alarming rise in bushmeat and ivory poaching in Kenya. Loisaba has only been able to maintain its anti-poaching patrols thanks to a donation from The Nature Conservancy, another charity that funds and gives scientific advice for conservation projects around the world.

Habitually operating at less than 40% occupancy, with just 48 beds to all those acres, you might think of Loisaba as a high-value, positive-impact answer to the daily disgorging of thousands of cruise passengers into Venices city centre. By paying $700 per day to enjoy the company of elephants, reticulated giraffes and an arks worth of other birds and mammals, Loisabas visitors are effectively paying to protect the wildlife from more intrusive human interventions. As Matthew Brown, The Nature Conservancys Africa director, put it, tourism that tangibly contributes to conservation outcomes is the best way to finance biodiversity. Without it, the idea that one can protect animals and help local people quickly falls apart.

For all the money that foreigners bring to Loisaba, the reserve lacks the diversity of clientele that is an ingredient of the most resilient tourist businesses. Bush tourism in general is attracting too few of Kenyas growing middle class while the high cost of living keeps many at home, those who do travel for holidays tend to head for the coast.

Being able to call on local customers would allow the countrys game reserves to recover faster once the current travel restrictions lapse which will happen for African tourists sooner than for those coming from further afield. In April, Kenyas tourism minister, Najib Balala, called for a paradigm shift in favour of the domestic and pan-African market. It is no longer about waiting for international visitors to come in, he said. If we start now, in five years we will be resilient [in the face of] any shocks whatsoever, even travel advisories imposed by the western countries.

Such a swift recovery is unlikely for the traditional stars of conservation tourism, the gorillas that are spread across national parks in Rwanda, Uganda and the Democratic Republic of Congo. After coming close to extinction in the 1980s, their numbers recovered thanks to an international rescue effort funded in part by blue-chip tourism. (Americans visitors to Rwanda spend an average of around $12,000 per trip.) In 2016, the Rwandan government doubled to $1,500 the fee that tourists must pay for a single hour with the coveted primates. This had the miraculous effect of upping revenues from $15m to $19m some of this money goes to pay rangers and fund local welfare schemes while also reducing the number of visitors who tramp through their habitat in the Volcanoes National Park, from 22,000 to 15,000.

Now that the countrys borders are shut and rich foreign tourists wont be back for months, a new conservation strategy will be needed. From an environmental point of view, the immediate peril is that the great apes catch coronavirus. The longer-term challenge is to protect them from a rise in poaching for gorilla meat, and from getting caught in snares laid for antelopes.

In June, Sheba Hanyurwa, who runs a tourism business across Uganda and Rwanda, told me that over recent years tourism revenues have allowed a certain economic diversification to take place. The relatively high salaries commanded by rangers and guides have enabled their communities to keep cows and chickens for their own needs. During the crisis, the governments of Uganda and Rwanda have maintained frequent patrols in their national parks with greater success than the DRC, where 12 rangers were recently killed in the perennially unstable Virunga National Park. But, Hanyurwa told me, hotel workers and porters have been laid off and people are hungry. The only livelihood here is from tourism and there wont be any international tourists at least until next year.

Covid-19 has exposed the flaw in the model of elite tourism with a conscience. There is no plan B.

Not all nature-based tourism is good for the nature it is based on. As environmental awareness has grown, many businesses have adopted feel-good terms like eco-friendly and green even though, in the words of one body that assesses tourism sustainability, the experiences they sell are neither of these things. Some travellers fail to notice that flying across the world to sit in a cabin sourced from illegally logged trees isnt as eco-friendly as their Instagram feed makes out. Others balk at the cost of being good. According to a survey conducted by travel company Tui in 2017, while 84% of European holidaymakers consider it important to reduce their carbon footprint, only 11% are willing to shoulder the additional costs of a sustainable holiday over an ordinary one.

Among the nations that have, in recent years, tried to build up wildlife tourism is Indonesia, home to the worlds largest lizard, the Komodo dragon. Last year, the government announced a plan to make the town of Labuan Bajo, which is currently the access point for Komodo national parks numerous islands, into one of 10 major tourism destinations. Ominously, the government scheme is called 10 new Balis.

The idea isnt to ease pressure on the over-touristed island of Bali, for which a major new airport is planned, but to emulate its success at attracting millions of tourists on cut-price holidays every year. In the process, Balis combination of heaving beaches, growing water shortages and mountains of rubbish may also be replicated at the 10 other destinations. What was once a small fishing village is now supercharged with boom-town zeal and non-stop construction of restaurants and hotels, reported a CNBC correspondent visiting Labuan Bajo in January.

Between 2008 and 2018, the annual number of visitors to Komodo national park increased from 44,000 to 176,000. One big attraction, apart from the nature itself, is the price. After your $50 flight from Bali lands at Labuan Bajos new airport, I was told by Glenn Wappett, a former British serviceman who skippers yachts around eastern Indonesia, you can stay in a hostel and take a day boat to see the dragons and still get change from $100. That includes the roughly $12 park entry fee. Lonely Planet named the island chain that includes Komodo its best-value destination for 2020. (That was before the guidebook publisher was hit by the global lockdown and suspended most of its commercial activities in April.)

Indonesias preference for mass over elite tourism has been guided by the addition of 2 million young people to the labour market each year. More tourists means more jobs. After all, even if their per-capita outlay is low, large numbers of visitors need more waiters, taxi drivers and marine guides than a handful of extravagant ones.

But as visitor numbers to the islands have risen, the dragon population has fallen. Mating practices were disrupted by tourists, while deer poaching depleted their main food source and logging destroyed their habitat. In 2018, Viktor Bungtilu Laiskodat, the governor of the province of East Nusa Tenggara, in which the park lies, advocated increasing the entrance fee to $500 with the aim of attracting richer tourists, reducing visitor numbers and protecting the lizards. In March 2019, after smugglers stole more than 40 Komodo dragons, his administration went a step further and announced that the island of Komodo, home to around 1,700 giant lizards, would close for the whole of 2020 to allow the reptiles, the deer they feed on and their shared habitat, to recuperate.

But the governors attempts at conserving the regions main attraction went down badly with many of the locals who make a living from tourism. There was a huge backlash from dive companies, hotels and restaurants, recalled Wappett. They demanded that tourists be allowed on Komodo, and in October, the national government overruled the governor and the plan was scrapped.

The virus is succeeding where the governor of East Nusa Tenggara failed. Entry to the Komodo National Park has been barred to all but the fishing communities that inhabit it. The dragons sup on venison and fish, which, according to Wappetts friends in the area, have returned in spectacular numbers to these overvisited waters.

Still, its not hard to imagine what will happen once tourism becomes feasible again. On 14 April, Indonesias finance minister predicted that coronavirus, by freezing the tourist trade, could leave as many as 5.2 million Indonesians unemployed. Unless some alternative path for job creation can be found in the future, as soon as flights resume, tourists will be encouraged to return en masse and the dragons will once again come under threat.

On 7 May, the UN World Tourism Organisation suggested that the coronavirus crisis would squeeze the industry so hard that progress towards making tourism sustainable principally by reducing overcrowding and addressing climate change would be not just halted but reversed. Indeed, since the start of the crisis, airlines and cruise companies have been lobbying hard for tax breaks and the lifting of environmental measures.

From the petrol and particulates that spew from jetskis to pesticides drenching the putting green, the holidaymakers every innocent pleasure seems like another blow to the poor old planet. Then there is the food left in the fridge and the chemicals used to launder the sheets after each single-night occupancy in one of Airbnbs 7 million rental properties, and the carcinogenic fuel that is burned by cruise ships. And then there are the carbon emissions. Tourism is significantly more carbon-intensive than other potential areas of economic development, reported a recent study in the journal Nature Climate Change. Between 2009 and 2013, the industrys global carbon footprint grew to about 8% of global greenhouse gas emissions, the majority generated by air travel. The rapid increase in tourism demand, the study went on, is effectively outstripping the decarbonisation of tourism-related technology.

Destructive though it is, the virus has offered us the opportunity to imagine a different world one in which we start decarbonising, and staying local. The absence of tourism has forced us to consider ways in which the industry can diversify, indigenise and reduce its dependency on the all-singing, all-dancing carbon disaster that is global aviation.

For Komodo in Indonesia the alternative ending involves fewer visitors paying more to visit the national park while the surrounding communities develop the fishing and textile industries that have kept them going for centuries. In Georgias Svaneti region, where the lure of tourist dollars has drawn people to abandon animal husbandry in favour of opening guesthouses and cafes, Tsotne Japaridze told me the crisis could be a lesson not to forget their traditional means of making a living.

More broadly, tourism must be valued not as a quickfire source of foreign exchange, but as an integrated part of a nations economy, subject to the same forward planning and cost-benefit analysis as any other sector. In places where tourism is too dominant, it needs to shrink. All this needs to happen in tandem with wider efforts to decarbonise society.

As an international industry, tourism means nothing less than the aggregate of activities that range from building airline engines at Rolls-Royces plant in Derbyshire to pulling pints in the Irish pub in Montego Bay. From this global perspective, it cannot easily be planned or controlled. Its natural bosses are municipal, provincial and national governments, and it is to these institutions that responsibility for reform now falls. Some have already begun. The council in Barcelona, for example, reclaimed parts of town that had been lost to holiday lets; the governor of East Nusa Tenggara tried to price the Komodo Dragon out of danger. Such instincts to tame tourisms excesses through taxes and pricing need to be adopted everywhere. Tourism isnt the right that many holidaymakers, whatever their budgets, seem to think it is. Its a luxury that needs to pay its way.

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The end of tourism? | Travel - The Guardian

Paddling the river of mirrors: ‘The spot to head if you need to leave the world behind’ – The Guardian

The upper reaches of south-east Queenslands Noosa River offer a level of seclusion thats hard to find, even in a country as vast as Australia. Before reaching the ocean near the shirtless joggers and deeply tanned shoppers of Hastings Street, the river journeys from the subtropical rainforest of Great Sandy national park beneath slow moving sandblows, through broad, shallow lakes and past million-dollar homes with private docks.

Its not a technically challenging river, but visitors are rare because the upper reaches are only accessible by canoe or electric motor boats. The absence of watercraft, almost imperceptible current and dark, tannin-stained waters combine to make the surface so reflective that its earned the nickname the river of mirrors. Mobile reception is intermittent at best and the campsites can only be reserved for one group at a time, making it the perfect spot to head if you need to leave the world behind for a bit.

The river is located in Cooloola Recreation Area, in the southern section of the Great Sandy national park (the northern section includes Fraser Island). Bushfires in 2019 caused significant damage to some sections of the park and forced the closure of the 48km Cooloola Great Walk that crosses it, but the river is once again open to visitors.

Cooloola means the sound the wind makes as it whispers through the branches of the trees in the language of the Gubbi Gubbi traditional owners, and there are few other sounds on the numerous tributaries of the Noosa today. That wasnt always the case, but the arrival of Europeans quickly led to massacres and mass displacement for the Gubbi Gubbi and the land was given over to mining, logging and even agriculture in cleared areas before the park was gazetted in 1975.

Today vegetation is reclaiming the land and large sections of the riverbank are no-landing zones. Overhanging branches are turned into circles by the mirror-like water, which is usually broken only by the V of ripples from your own canoe. Even the night skies are perfectly reflected before morning mists roll in to obscure the surface.

Dusky purple lilies flower in the rivers backwaters and the banks are lined with gnarled, flaking paperbarks, scribbly gums and banksia whose bristly seed pods open like castanets. Closer to ground level, keep an eye out for intricate native orchids and carnivorous sundews as well as colourful wildflowers like Christmas bells and bright pink boronia.

More than 350 bird species are found in the park, including cormorants, herons and ospreys that nest near the river. And dont let rumours of the Cooloola Monster scare you; its a subterranean cricket-like invertebrate that was discovered in the area in 1976.

Beyond the river, the 61,750ha recreation area stretches from the outskirts of Noosa to Rainbow Beach and into the hinterland. It encompasses a diverse range of environments from beaches and giant sandhills to open woodland, patches of rainforest, melaleuca swamps and heath covered in wildflowers. A number of roads pass through the park (most require a high-clearance four-wheel drive) but the best way to visit is under your own steam, either by paddling up the river or on one of the two multi-day walks that traverse the park.

Where to paddle: Start at Elanda Point or Boreen Point on the expansive Lake Cootharaba before venturing into the narrower upper sections of the river campsite three is an enjoyable half-day paddle from either.

To reduce the paddling time, you can also launch from the old logging camp at Harrys Hut, which lies on a very scenic stretch of river only accessible by four-wheel drive.

Where to sleep: With multiple sites hidden in the trees and a longdrop toilet, campsite three is the perfect base to explore upriver or walk to the Cooloola Sandpatch for views over the Noosa River, Pacific Ocean and volcanic peaks of the Sunshine Coast hinterland. Make sure to book ahead.

Nearest hot meal: Habitat Noosa at Boreen Point has a range of accommodation options, including glamping tents, and the onsite bistro with a nanobrewery makes it a welcome first stop after a paddle.

Getting there: The upper sections of the park are accessible from Rainbow Beach, but Noosa Heads (139km north of Brisbane) is the best base for exploring the river. Boreen Point is 30km by car from Noosa Heads (or a long days paddle if you want to launch from the esplanade on Gympie Terrace).

When to go: Visit between August and October to see the full palette of wildflowers. Sections of the park are regularly closed due to fire danger in the warmer months.

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Paddling the river of mirrors: 'The spot to head if you need to leave the world behind' - The Guardian

What happened on Santorini when the tourism ‘machine’ stopped – CNN

(CNN) There's a reason Greece's Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis flew to Santorini earlier this month when he wanted to announce the reopening of his country to tourism.

When the evening sun begins to dip behind the rim of the extinct volcano of which the island forms part, it is one of the most romantic and beautiful photo opportunities on the planet.

It's a view that helps make Santorini Greece's most visited island, receiving up to two million tourists annually -- many arriving on the gigantic cruise ships that can normally be seen parked in the middle of the natural bay below.

The island will be welcoming international visitors via airplane once again from July 1, but cautions over the coronavirus mean their numbers will be far fewer than before and the cruise ships won't be returning any time soon.

And while that means a brutal time ahead for some businesses, others on the island are relishing the prospect of a new era, one in which Santorini's beauty can flourish without being turned into a "machine that just created money."

Double blow

The Covid-19 lockdown has left Santorini deserted.

ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

The impact of a Covid lockdown has already been dramatic for a destination that relies on tourism for 90% of its income. In Santorini's case, the lockdown came as a double blow as the island had recently begun to open its hotels and restaurants all year round.

During this enforced isolation only Santorini residents were allowed on the island. Guests from the mainland had to return home and no new tourists were allowed in. The drastic shutdown worked, however. Not one case of the potentially deadly disease was diagnosed on Santorini.

Although the island is opening up again, everyone is being careful. Personal protection will not just be for the benefit of guests.

"No one on Santorini wants to catch Covid," says Joy Kerluke, who runs Dmitri's Taverna at Ammoudi Bay. "I have to say that with the lockdown we felt safe on Santorini as we had no cases and nobody was coming here. I think we all enjoyed the scenery and the quietness for a while."

Santorini, with its blue-domed churches and thousand-foot cliffs will look exactly the same, but it's going to be unusually empty.

"We expect 15% percent of the visitors compared to previous years," says George Filippidis, general manager of the Andronis Suites hotel on Santorini. "The economic damage will be huge. We will operate at a loss for 2020 but we want to open so that we offer employment to our staff, and support the local community that is wholly dependent on tourism."

Quiet and uncrowded

The cruise ships carrying up to 3,000 people are not expected to return in 2020.

ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

The complete absence of visitors has allowed several major projects to be completed. "The new terminal at the airport is now operational," says Filippidis. "The new road which connects Oia with the airport and part of Athinios port has also been completed, so getting round the island is going to be much easier."

For a destination that was second only to Venice with its cruise-ship issues, the fact that very few of these enormous vessels -- if any -- will return in 2020 is considered to be good news. With each ship disgorging up to 3,000 people onto minibuses, these floating hotels clogged up Santorini's roads.

"No cruise ship arrivals have been confirmed yet," says Filippidis. "And even if they start at some point it will be very limited."

At Dmitri's Taverna, one of the few quayside restaurants to offer an uninterrupted view of Santorini's famous sunset, Kerluke is having to space out the tables and prepare personal protection equipment.

"We will have fewer tables along the quay, which for us is hard as we have a small taverna already," she says. "And we will wear masks and gloves. There will be antiseptic for our customers too."

Kerluke, who arrived from Canada 25 years ago, says there are consolations.

"Those people who do decide to come to Santorini will have a lovely time," she says. "They will see Santorini, quiet and uncrowded like it used to be."

'Strange time'

Locals have been reflecting on Santorini's future.

ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

Apart from tourism, the other mainstay of Santorini's economy has been its vineyards. The unique, Assyrtiko-based wines of Santorini are exported all over the world, and most of the island's 18 vineyards are open to visitors.

By now the 2019 vintage should be in restaurants and supermarkets across the island, but Petros Vamvakousis, manager of Venetsanos Winery, says the lockdown has disrupted distribution.

"Our 2019 vintage remains inside stainless steel tanks and barrels," he says. "It should have been bottled between February and April but the five people who would do this had to remain at home. Now we are trying to catch up.

"Normally we produce 50,000 bottles a year but we rely on exports, and these are close to zero at the moment. Our distributor in America informed us that while restaurants remain closed in the USA, there is no market for Santorini wine in America."

Like many wineries, Venetsanos had until the crisis been able earn income through tastings and tours. Cut dramatically into the cliffs overlooking Athinios Harbour, the winery has a beautiful terrace where wine is served with snacks, but Vamvakousis says that the numbers of people who can be accommodated will be limited to four or six per table from now on.

"We are living in a strange time," he says. "Everything about the island reminds me of winter. Many restaurants, cafs and hotels are closed. It is summer now and it is extremely strange for Santorini to be so quiet and lonely."

Stopping the 'machine'

Recent years have seen complaints about overtourism in Santorini.

ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

Vamvakousis says he is optimistic that busy days will once again return, but believes the enforced downturn will help prompt a reevaluation of the island's future.

"Santorini is one of the most beautiful places on Earth, but I am sure that lockdown was helpful," he says. "It stopped the machine that just created money and did not care about the environment. Now it is the right time to think what was wrong with Santorini. We have the right to protect, but we don't have the right to destroy."

While money is going to be a big issue in 2020, not everything about the interrupted tourist season is a disaster. Gill Rackham, originally from Britain, who has run Lotza restaurant and the Oia Old Houses apartments with her husband Vasilis for more than 30 years, sees mixed blessings.

"About a month ago our July bookings were looking good, approximately 75% occupancy, but now it's down to 20% and falling," says Rackham. "But my take is that within this catastrophe there will be winners. Santorini has been given a respite to breathe again... no crowds, no traffic jams... no cruise ships."

Rackham has noticed that "on the beaches of Perivolas and Perrissa there are a few tavernas up and running but most for local Greeks and Athenian visitors! Elsewhere owners are starting to return to open up for 1 July, which is the expected date for international flights."

Some hotels have taken the three-month lockdown time to rethink how they interact with guests. "We will be offering our services digitally," says George Filippidis at Andronis.

"You'll be able to check in online, order cocktails, book a cruise in the azure Aegean waters, and check out when your trip comes to an end, simply by using your mobile device."

Honeymoon advantage

Santorini earns 90% of its income from tourism.

ARIS MESSINIS/AFP via Getty Images

Indeed the privacy model that made Santorini so successful as a honeymoon destination could well work to its advantage.

"Rather than huge hotels with large public spaces, most of Santorini's suites have private entrances and sunlit balconies with a dedicated pool or Jacuzzi that is cleansed and chlorinated daily," says Filippidis. "Breakfast is served in your room, not in a dining hall. This is ideal for guests who want to feel safe. Unlike in big resorts we're not having to put up perspex screens between sun-loungers."

Greece is no stranger to financial crises, but in the 1950s and '60s, and as recently as 2008, it has always been able to look to mass tourism as a means of reviving the economy.

The irony of the current situation is that tourism, once the solution, is now the problem.

In his Santorini speech, Prime Minister Mitsotakis said he wants Greece to be safe but he also knows with 20% of Greek nationals working in tourism and the industry contributing up to 30% of the economy, he needs islands like Santorini to have a long and profitable summer and even a prosperous fall.

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What happened on Santorini when the tourism 'machine' stopped - CNN

Take a virtual tour to any place around the world and earn $1000 as award – Happytrips

So, if you have been lazy or just ignoring the virtual tours, this enticing offer will get you up and running. Referring to this offer, the travel portal said that one way the theme parks, museums, and other businesses are helping people to keep calm is by creating these innovative virtual tours, which help people to take a break from the reality and satiate their travel blues.

Referring to the job details, the company added that they are looking for someone who can help them determine which of these virtual tours are the best ways to escape their quarantine cabin fever. The company will be enlisting someone to take 10 virtual tours, review their best features, and pick one as their dream destination once its safe to travel again. In return, they will be awarding the person $1000 in cash, which can be used for their dream trip.

The winning applicant will get an extensive list of virtual tours to choose from. He can select his top 10, enjoy the tours, and name a winner. Anybody interested in this job can fill out the necessary application form and share why he is the ideal candidate for the job. The winner will be declared on June 30, 2020.

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Take a virtual tour to any place around the world and earn $1000 as award - Happytrips

For tourism, here is an Incredible India 2.0 plan – Hindustan Times

The coronavirus pandemic has impacted every sector, but perhaps, the travel, tourism and hospitality sectors have been most affected. Which is why, with the proper compliances, safety and sanitisation measures, and Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) for responsible reopening being issued, these sectors should now resume. The time for recovery is around the corner.

In his Independence Day speech last year, Prime Minister (PM) Narendra Modi emphasised the importance of making India a global hub for tourism, urging each citizen to visit 15 tourist destinations in India by 2022. With an inward focus on travel, we must convert this into an opportunity and advance our domestic tourism and hospitality sectors.

Travel, tourism, and hospitality have an immense multiplier effect on the economy. These are sectors that can exponentially create jobs, and India needs high-quality job creation now. Travel and tourism has employed more than 42 million people in India or accounted approximately for 8.1% of the total employment opportunities. Last year, it contributed 9.3% to Indias Gross Domestic Product (GDP), and received 5.9% of total investments. It can accelerate the path to 9-10% annual growth and add millions of high-quality jobs each year. This is necessary, given that 72% of Indias population is below 32 years, and the average age is 29. Tourism is the perfect fit for the future generation.

India is ranked third in the World Travel and Tourism Council (WTTC)s Travel and Tourism Power Ranking, which assesses 185 countries on the basis of four key sector ingredients: Total travel and tourism GDP, foreign visitor spending, domestic spending, and travel and tourism capital investment. India is now ranked behind only China and the United States (US). The World Economic Forum conducts a biennial study across 14 vital parameters, and India has improved by 12 places over the last two years, now ranking 40th out of 136 countries in terms of travel and tourism competitiveness.

This is encouraging and makes the sector an essential cog to the New India growth story. The sector is relatively untapped. An added aspect of the travel and tourism sector is that not only does the sector provide high-quality jobs and countless synergies, it also enhances investment into India, accelerates development, and showcases Indias unique treasures.

Systematic tourism promotion campaigns will be important in the near future. There are two that I have helmed, which brought the spotlight on Indias attraction for tourists. Incredible India and Gods Own Country blended potential with awareness, allowing Indian entrepreneurs, global entities, domestic and foreign tourists, and the government machinery to work together and accelerate growth in the sector. A domestic-focused Incredible India 2.0 that showcases what the nation offers to Indians could be the post-pandemic plan for the sector. India, after all, has amazing diversity, from 38 Unesco World Heritage sites to the Himalayas to pristine beaches, and plenty of other natural assets. Besides that, Indias achievement in tiger population conservation has led to a rise in the tiger population to 2,967 in 2018 from 2,226 in 2014. This is an increase of 741 tigers or nearly 25%, making India home to around 70% of the worlds tiger population.

Prior to the pandemic, work on transportation to allow access to many of Indias hidden treasures was paying off. The UDAN scheme has been a huge success, and now the government can focus on the earlier plans of launching 100 tourism-oriented trains. Also adding to the ease of access is the work that has been done on highways, roads, and ports, highlighted by the Bharatmala and Sagarmala projects. There has also been work done to enhance airport capacity and expand regional connectivity. The Airports Authority of India has estimated capital spending targets of more than ~20,000 crore by 2022, and more than 70 regional airports that are under-utilised will be developed.

The Holistic Island Development plan is an ambitious policy directive focusing on the Andaman & Nicobar (A&N) and Lakshadweep Islands. It addresses tourism-based projects that automatically create jobs for the islanders, and enhance connectivity through key infrastructure projects.

Until the pandemic, the restaurant industry was a dynamic sector. Expect to see them rebound, starting with Unlock 1.0, with delivery services such as Zomato and Swiggy having been involved in essential goods deliveries and maintaining the supply chain for food delivery throughout the lockdown. India has recently become a major player in the culinary ecosystem, making restaurants a ~4,25,000 crore market. They create millions of jobs and have a massive multiplier impact as well.

Travel and tourism will be the key driver for high-quality employment and unparalleled sustainable growth for the next 30 years. Despite challenges, as we responsibly reopen, the opportunities for the sector to help growth will continue to increase, and the domestic demand will help build confidence in the sectors revival. The pandemic has only altered the progress, not stopped it. A responsible and phased recovery is imminent, and there is no better time for it than now. The positive impact of the sector will span all the downstream and upstream benefits that accompany growth in this sector. This has the potential to become the biggest job creator for India.

Amitabh Kant is CEO, NITI Aayog

The views expressed are personal

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For tourism, here is an Incredible India 2.0 plan - Hindustan Times

Foreign holidays ‘to restart on July 4’ – The Telegraph

The low-cost airline, which collapsed in March after failing to secure government rescue support, could resumeservice.

Anadvisor to one of the investors that took over the airlinetoldan Australia newspaperthat the UK regional carrier could fly again.

Cyrus Capital was among the investorsin the Connect Airways consortium which took over Flybe in 2019. It had planned to rebrand Europes largest regional airline this year as Virgin Connect in a strategy to concentrate on feeding Virgin Atlantics hubs at Heathrow and Manchester.

Jonathan Peachey, a Cyrus Capital advisor who played a key role in creating Connect Airways to acquire Flybe, told The Australian: Its definitely not the case that we have abandoned Flybe,

He added: Cyrus is doing everything it can, along with the other consortium members, to ensure that a business emerges that can re-hire the many thousands of employees who were dependent on it.

Flybe handled eight million passengers annually but was hard hit when travel screechedto a halt as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Thousands of flights were grounded as a result of lockdowns and travel restrictions.Many carriersare now resuming service, with flights planned from July 1.

See our full list of airlines that have announced the resumption of flights.

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Foreign holidays 'to restart on July 4' - The Telegraph