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Kesang Wangdi |
Bhutan, where the annual tourism season runs for only five and a
half months each year, is looking to transform itself into a year-round
destination through a series of product, marketing and infrastructural
developments.
According to Kesang Wangdi, director general Tourism Council of
Bhutan, hotel occupancy rates range from 10-30 per cent throughout the
year, while tourism-related activities mostly take place in the capital
Thimpu or nearby Paro, making it difficult for businesses dependent
on tourism to survive.
Hence, the government is making moves to expand the country’s tourism
product portfolio, both geographically and categorically, with the aim
of “distributing the benefits obtained from... tourism,
throughout the calendar year and to tourism deficient areas...
particularly in the rural south and east of Bhutan",
said Wangdi.
A host of niche products covering cultural, festival, wellness,
spiritual and MICE tourism is under development in various regions,
while a route that links with Buddhist sites in neighbouring nations, as
well as a joint destination marketing campaign together with Thailand
are in the works.
To meet the projected increase in arrivals, the government is also
incentivising developers to build infrastructure outside the main cities
of Thimpu and Paro.
“To encourage hotel development, we permit 100 per cent foreign
ownership if developers construct hotels of a five-star calibre.
Moreover, all foreign firms will be treated as Bhutanese entities – they
are equal before the law,” said Wangdi.
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Thimpu |
However, before any private sector plans are implemented, they are
subject to evaluation against the country's gross national happiness
(GNH) masterplan benchmarks, he cautioned. “In order for plans to be
approved, developers will have to ensure that their projects adhere to
the nine pillars set out in Bhutan’s GNH philosophy."
There is expected to be an increase in arrivals from 30,000 presently to 100,000 per year by 2013. |
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