Just over 800,000 visitors recorded, mainly from mainland, but still one-third of arrivals in November 2019.
Macau Grand Prix
Event runs for three days, with a host of entertainment on offer as well as real-time race broadcasts.
Fines of up to MOP 20,000 await anyone who defies the ban, which includes any sort of ‘unmanned aircraft activity’ over the peninsula.
Free admission carnival will feature car racing sports for kids and a chance to take a closer look at the cars plus live-streamed races.
Event features recreation of the Guia Circuit and interactive games, but admission comes with a slew of rules and regulations.
Revamped exhibits – now eco- and disabled-friendly – highlight all the history and thrills of Macao’s world-famous number-one sporting event.
The authorities will ban all unmanned aircraft activity over the peninsula during this year’s three-day Macau Grand Prix, which begins tomorrow, to ensure that the event will take place in a safe environment.
Chief Executive Ho Iat Seng said that the government has decided to go ahead with the Macau Grand Prix (MGP) this year amid the COVID-19 pandemic because it already decided last year to hold the annual motor-racing event in 2020 and signed agreements with the relevant contractors at that time.
Racers from Hong Kong competing in next month’s Macau Grand Prix (MGP) will have to undergo 14 days of quarantine and medical observation at one of the government’s “quarantine hotels” upon arrival in Macao.