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  • Home to popular destinations such as Bali, Phuket and Singapore, the tourism sector in

  • Southeast Asia is in survival mode.

  • Even as travel picks up in Europe in the form of air bridges between key cities, many countries

  • in Asia are slow to reopen their borders, despite recovering faster from the pandemic.

  • So what does this mean for the tourism sector in Southeast Asia?

  • For months, governments in Southeast Asia have proposed forming bubbles for leisure travel.

  • However, this has largely failed to materialize, denting hopes of a quick recovery for the battered tourism industry.

  • In 2019, 136 million visitors to Southeast Asia contributed more than $380 billion

  • to the region's combined GDP.

  • With international air travel not expected to recover until 2024, tourism authorities

  • and the hospitality industry in Southeast Asia are banding together to tide through the crisis.

  • The resort island of Phuket is key to Thailand's plans to revive its tourism industry.

  • Hotels on the island need to be running, generally speaking, at around 30% occupancy to break even.

  • The majority of them that have chosen to open before now, I don't think are running those numbers.

  • So the international customer is really required for us to be able to sustain.

  • Until recently, a pilot scheme would have allowed healthy foreign tourists to travel

  • around Thailand after a 14-day quarantine and three-week stay in Phuket.

  • Those plans were delayed after the kingdom recorded a new infection in September,

  • breaking a 100-day virus-free streak.

  • Hoteliers such as Andrew are torn between balancing public health and economic health.

  • There was also some concern in the local community that if we were going to be a test bubble

  • for the country, was the location ready?

  • What does that mean to be a test bubble and have international guests coming in,

  • staying in hotels in a quarantine situation?

  • I think what we have to do in the industry, if we focus on Phuket, is give confidence

  • that the hotels are ready to handle the borders opening.

  • It is fast-changing though, but we just have to be quite fluid and flexible at a time like now.

  • In 2019, some 40 million visitors spent $62 billion in the Kingdom.

  • With no tourist arrivals in the country since March 25, Thailand's GDP may shrink by 9% in a moderate scenario.

  • Besides housing long-stay travelers in Phuket, a similar model is being considered in the

  • country's capital of Bangkok, says Tanes Petsuwan, the Deputy Governor of the Tourism Authority of Thailand.

  • We are not closing the country, but we'll just make sure that some channels that tourists

  • can access to the country will be done in the safest ways.

  • Despite delays in forming travel bubbles with neighboring countries, the plan is still very much alive, Tanes added.

  • We still believe in the standards of the public health services of Southeast Asian countries,

  • the performance of these countries to prevent the pandemic.

  • So, Singapore is one of the countries which we will keep our eyes open.

  • One day, we're going to see the light at the end of the tunnel.

  • With the pandemic largely under control in parts of Southeast Asia, commercial flights

  • between safe zones have resumed in the form ofair bubbles,” starting with business travelers.

  • While this calibrated approach may not account for much, it is the first step in shoring up

  • economies in Southeast Asia before the easing of more travel restrictions.

  • Besides creatinggreen lanesfor some business travelers, Singapore has also introduced

  • a short-term travel scheme for visitors from a growing number of countries

  • such as New Zealand and Vietnam.

  • However, it remains to be seen if this will encourage more leisure travelers to Singapore.

  • In the first three weeks after the scheme was launched, only 136 short-term travelers

  • from two countries visited the city-state.

  • Whether it's a green lane or an air travel bubble, these are all signs of confidence,

  • between two countries or two destinations.

  • The situation in several other countries and regions around the world is indeed improving.

  • But ultimately, we have to watch carefully to make sure that there aren't any second wave, third wave infections as well.

  • So we will proceed cautiously.

  • Meanwhile, Singapore is pushing for its hospitality industry to accelerate its digitalization efforts.

  • Now is the time to deepen and build new skills in digitalization, contactless, virtual reality capabilities.

  • Now is the time to think of how to create more new products, new experiences

  • that will be interesting to the visitors of the future.

  • And the great thing is that they can test-bed it on Singaporeans through our domestic tourism campaign.

  • Businesses are also using this period to accelerate their digital solutions.

  • I'm meeting TY Suen, the founder of a tour group providing both virtual and private tours,

  • to find out how they're doing business during this time.

  • We never ever thought of doing something virtual because we always thought that tours and travel

  • was meant to be a very physical thing.

  • Virtual tours could include people who don't really have the privilege to travel.

  • We see a lot of expansion that can be done.

  • Right now, where we are, at this location, is what we call One-North.

  • And it's this place called the LaunchPad, where it's dubbed as the Silicon Valley of Singapore.

  • Virtual tours allow us to go into places that were never meant for tourism.

  • As more venues implement a slew of safety measures such as contactless check-in systems

  • and contact tracing, will inconvenience and cost deter guests?

  • Hospitality by nature has been very traditional, guest experience-focused.

  • So any technology that we add has to tremendously improve the guest experience.

  • But with COVID, going contactless or digital check-in has become a little bit more important, or mandatory.

  • So we've democratized this experience by making it easier and also simpler for the hotels to buy and implement.

  • Imagine you are traveling.

  • You could just take a photo of your passport or a photo ID, and then a selfie.

  • So we use computer vision and AI to automatically set up a guest registration card digitally.

  • What is happening in the background is, we send this data securely, kind of like internet banking,

  • to a hotel, so that the whole check-in is completed, even before the guest arrives at the property.

  • To access my room, I just have to tap the room key and access the sensor.

  • Voila.

  • We do not pass on any cost to a hotel guest.

  • This is no longer a VIP-only exclusive feature.

  • This is something people not just want but they need.

  • Despite the measured approaches in reopening borders in Southeast Asia, the different rates

  • of infection among countries mean that plans for a “one-size-fits-allapproach,

  • such as a regional travel bubble, has been put on hold.

  • Vietnam, which has largely contained the virus and resumed some international flights,

  • has also proposed forming smaller "travel bubblesto tourist hotspots within the region.

  • In neighboring Cambodia, authorities have implemented a $3,000 healthcare and funeral deposit

  • for all foreigners.

  • Whereas the resort island of Bali, which experienced a spike in infections after welcoming domestic tourists,

  • will be closed to foreign visitors until the end of 2020.

  • Slowly but surely, Southeast Asian countries are easing their travel restrictions, allowing

  • essential business and official travelers within their borders.

  • However, these moves may be too little, too late, for the tourist hotspots.

  • Until travel bubbles or safe zones can be established, the landscapes in Phuket or Bali

  • may be different at the end of the pandemic.

  • Hey, guys. So when do you think tourism will pick up in your country?

  • We'd love to hear from you.

  • In the meantime, thanks for watching, don't forget to subscribe and stay safe, everyone.

Home to popular destinations such as Bali, Phuket and Singapore, the tourism sector in

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