Tuesday, 30 June 2020

AIRPORTS OF THAILAND FORECASTS 50% FALL IN REVENUE, PASSENGERS

Passengers walk through the terminal in a near-empty
Suvarnabhumi International Airport in Bangkok on
June 3, 2020.      
Photo: AFP
Airports of Thailand (AoT) said it expects passenger numbers and revenue to fall by 50% in 2020 as a result of the coronavirus crisis.

AoT, which manages six airports including Bangkok’s main Suvarnabhumi, on Wednesday forecast a 50.7% year-on-year drop in revenue for its 2020 fiscal year and a 42.2% fall in 2021.

If a vaccine can be developed and distributed by July next year, the Thai economy can begin to recover after January 2022, then air traffic volumes could return to normal levels by October that year, state-owned AoT said in a statement.

It expects that by 2023, passenger numbers will reach 144.2 million and 902,000 flights, slightly above pre-crisis levels.

“Such forecasts are based on the assumption that a second wave of Covid-19 infections still strike different countries targeted for making bilateral agreements on (a) travel bubble with Thailand,” AoT said.

Thailand has not yet signed any agreements for a tourism or travel exchange with other countries.

AoT said it expects travel within Thailand, which on Tuesday approved a domestic tourism package worth 22.4 billion baht, to begin to recover in August and reach normal levels in October 2022.

Thailand’s aviation regulator suspended all commercial flights from entering the country since April.

Read the full article at Bangkok Post: https://www.bangkokpost.com/business/1936560/airports-of-thailand-forecasts-50-fall-in-revenue-passengers?fbclid=IwAR2dLrn96DsilHGi2Q5JQqaISTK7BAs2jafPrMp2KrncJtbbP5f_hmgXri0

#coronaviruscrisis, #economicimpact, #Thailand

Mekong Tourism Coordinating Office 
c/o 3rd Floor, Department of Tourism, Ministry of Tourism and Sports, 154 Rama 1 Road
National Stadium, Wangmai, Pathumwan, Bangkok 10330, Thailand
Web: www.mekongtourism.org
Tel: +66 2038 5071-1
Mobile: +66 8555 44234, +66 8098 95853

No comments:

Post a Comment