International tourism to see 70% fall in arrivals this year: UNWTO
International tourism is set to fall by 70% this year, marking the sector’s biggest slump in arrivals since records began in the 1950s, the United Nations World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) Secretary-General Zurab Pololikashvili has said.
In an interview with German newspaper Handelsblatt, Pololikashvili said this prediction was based on the assumption that countries around the world would gradually open their borders from August.
UNWTO forecasts published in early May suggested that the number of tourists worldwide could fall by between 60-80% in 2020 as a result of the pandemic.
The agency suggested that so-called air corridors allowing tourists to travel between countries at low risk of coronavirus contagion could help to restart the global tourism industry. The corridors would represent the “first steps” towards re-establishing international links, Pololikashvili said.
The idea has already gained traction in parts of Europe. Officials in Spain’s tourism-reliant Balearic Islands have suggested German travellers should be allowed to fly back as soon as possible. Countries with large tourism sectors in Europe and beyond have suffered badly as travel restrictions have decimated visitor numbers and left many businesses that rely on the trade struggling to survive.
Pololikashvili said the UNWTO had opposed the travel shutdowns from the start and criticized the coordination of lockdown measures as chaotic. He called on the European Union to reopen not only to tourism within the bloc but also to external countries such as Turkey, arguing that it was “impossible to have 100% security” from the virus.