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COVID-19 epidemic affects tourism ‘very much’: MGTO chief

MGTO Director Maria Helena de Senna Fernandes admitted that the COVID-19 epidemic has been affecting Macau’s tourism “very much”.

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UPDATED: 22 Dec 2023, 5:43 am

Addressing Tuesday’s daily press conference about Macau’s novel coronavirus (COVID-19) situation, Macau Government Tourism Office (MGTO) Director Maria Helena de Senna Fernandes admitted that the COVID-19 epidemic has been affecting Macau’s tourism “very much”.

The tourism chief also said that she “has never seen such bad performance figures” since she started to work for the tourism office.

According to the Official Gazette (BO), Senna Fernandes started to work for the government’s tourism office in 1992 before being appointed as its director in 2012.

Senna Fernandes made the remarks Tuesday evening at the Health Bureau (SSM) adjacent to the public Conde de São Januário Hospital Centre, when replying to a question by a reporter who asked to what degree the novel coronavirus epidemic has adversely affected Macau’s tourism industry.

The tourism chief said that the impact of the epidemic on Macau’s tourism industry was “of course very large” for both inbound and outbound tourism. For inbound tourism, she pointed out that no tour groups are visiting the city. For outbound tourism, she said that only a few local tour groups are slated to travel to Europe in the near future, while virtually no tour groups will travel to destinations in Asia, except one group which is slated to travel to Japan next month.

According to Senna Fernandes, the average room occupancy rate of Macau’s hotels and guesthouses stood at 11.8 percent between February 15 and 21. The average occupancy rate of two-star hotels and guesthouses combined was 57 percent during the one-week period, while five-star hotels’ average occupancy rate was only in the one-digit range, she said.

According to official statistics, the average room occupancy rate of Macau’s 123 hotels and guesthouses stood at 90.8 percent last year.

Senna Fernandes said that last week’s 11.8 percent average occupancy rate was much lower than during the SARS epidemic in 2003. “We did not see such a low figure even during the SARS epidemic in 2003,” she said.

The tourism chief also said that the average room rate of Macau’s hotels and guestrooms was 690 patacas last week, adding that she “had never heard this figure in over 10 years”.

Senna Fernandes said that for the time being the government could not estimate by how much the number of visitor arrivals would drop this year as it was still not known when the epidemic on the mainland and elsewhere will ease.

Senna Fernandes said that her office was drafting plans to boost the recovery of the local tourism sector once the epidemic has started to wane in the future, adding that the future recovery measures would be rolled out in phases.

Meanwhile, Senna Fernandes also said that the government has decided to postpone the annual Macau International Travel (Industry) Expo, which was initially scheduled to be held in April, until September. She said that this year’s expo will also feature a “gastronomy forum”.

Senna Fernandes also said that there was even uncertainty as to whether the annual firework display contest could be held in September as scheduled. She noted that teams from the mainland as well as a number of foreign countries such as Italy, Japan and South Korea are invited to compete in the annual contest every year.

She said that teams from countries and regions hit by the COVID-19 epidemic would need to take a long time to prepare for the annual contest, adding that they were initially slated to start their preparatory work now despite the event not being held until September, including ordering fireworks from factories. She said that firework factories on the mainland have only resumed production recently. She said that the government would hire a consultancy to assess whether the firework display contest could be held in September as scheduled.

Meanwhile, Lo Iek Long, the clinical director of the public hospital, announced the discharge of the seventh COVID-19 patient – who also happened to be the seventh confirmed case in Macau – on Tuesday, a 67-year-old woman from Wuhan. The patient, who returned to the mainland shortly after her discharge, has applied to be exempted from paying her hospital bill of 47,000 patacas (US$5,900) due to her financial condition. Only one of the seven patients discharged so far has paid her bill.

Macau’s last two COVID-19 cases, the 9th and 10th cases, were confirmed on February 4. The 10 cases comprise seven tourists from Wuhan and three locals. Including Tuesday’s discharged patient, all seven patients from Wuhan have meanwhile been cured and returned to the mainland. The three local patients are still under treatment in the public hospital’s isolation ward.

(The Macau Post Daily/Macau News)
PHOTO © Government Information Bureau (GCS)

UPDATED: 22 Dec 2023, 5:43 am

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