According to the Phuket Mid-Year Hotel Update
report by hospitality consulting firm C9 Hotelworks, an 11% surge
in airport arrivals in the first six months of 2012 for a total of
2.32 million passengers is driving Phuket's hospitality market as
the destination chalks up an healthy 75% hotel occupancy island
wide.
A rise in direct international flights in
particular is setting the stage for a record high 9.3 million
passengers travelling through the airport forecast for this year
with the improved access being reflected in soaring hotel
occupancy rates from January to June, with leading metric RevPAR
shooting up by 8%.
C9 Hotelworks Managing Director, Bill Barnett,
said, "Sustained direct access to the island is having a major
impact on the hospitality sector and it is resulting in an
increasingly self-sufficient position for Brand Phuket. New
airlift from Mainland China, Russia, plus the massive pick up in
regional low-cost carrier flights is driving a new era of mass
tourism to the island and the hotel sector is a clear beneficiary
of the growing trend."
Top growth markets are China,
Eastern Europe and Malaysia growing at 66%, 33% and 17%
respectively versus the same period last year, according to the
report.
The C9 research further highlights that hotel
transaction levels in 2012 are expected to top US$315 million.
Hotel groups benefiting most from the boom include Singapore's Lum
Chang Development, Thailand's Minor Hotel Group, Malaysia's TA Global Berhad and Hawaii's Outrigger Hotels and Resorts who have
acquired significant hotel properties already this year.
Phuket's hotel pipeline remains robust, driven but both
international and domestic investment. Between now and 2015, 5,080 new rooms are under development which will increase total
inventory by 11%, the report reveals.
However, there are obstacles in the future
to smooth development warns Mr Barnett. "Despite a upwards trading
pattern, mass tourism is the elephant in the room of every major
resort destination in Asia and the island continues to face both a
mounting infrastructure dilemma and lacks a clear-cut long-term
tourism plan ... This can perhaps be best
demonstrated by the delayed upgrade plans at the gateway Phuket
International Airport. With the expansion plan now expected to be
completed by 2015, assuming an average annual growth rate of 5%,
the expanded airport would hit capacity by 2017. Essentially this
equates to a scenario of a new facility being dead on arrival," he
said.
See also:
Emirates to Launch Non-Stop Flights to Phuket, Thailand and
Hotels in Asia Pacific Report Mixed Results for July 2012
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