A strong increase in international visitor
arrivals in August, a bumper Australian performance and a major
upturn in the destination’s ever-building positioning as a new
cruise destination has helped Solomon Islands tourism stay on
track for what is shaping up to be one of its best years in recent
times.
Official figures released by the Solomon Islands
National Statistics Office this week show a total of 1918
international visitor arrivals arrived across the month, the
figure eclipsing the 1426 recorded for the same period in 2015 by
34.5%.
The August figures bring the destination’s
eight-month tally for 2016 to 14,953, a more than 11%
increase over the 13,464 figure achieved for the same eight-month
period in 2015.
The numbers have kept the Solomon Islands Visitors
Bureau on track for its projected 9% visitor arrival
increase in 2016.
Australian arrivals continue to dominate, the
836 August 2016 intake up 46.6% over the 570 total
achieved in August 2015 and representing 41% of all international
visitors.
The 6212 Australian total for January-August
2016 is now 6.38% ahead of the 5839 achieved for the same
period in 2015.
The United States has maintained its second
spot, figures for August climbing 25.2% from 111 in 2015
to 139 this year.
Collective US figures for the eight-month period
January-August show a 14.3% increase from the 931 recorded
in 2015 to 1065 in 2016.
Solomon Islands Visitors Bureau CEO, Josefa ‘Jo’
Tuamoto said it was particularly pleasing to see New Zealand
visitor arrivals start to climb with a total of 139 New Zealanders
visiting the destination in August compared to 121 for the same
month in 2015 – an increase of 14.8%.
The August figures take the eight-month
tally for New Zealand visitors for the year to 1037, a 9.7%
increase over the 936 visiting last year and holding New Zealand
firmly in place as the destination’s third most important visitor
source.
While the visitor arrival figures, all recorded at
Honiara International Airport, are extremely encouraging, Mr
Tuamoto drew strong reference to the Solomon Islands’
ever-increasing positioning on the international cruise scene
which so far this year has seen 10 major vessels entering Solomon
Islands’ waters.
“We have long recognised how tight our current
hotel room inventory is and this does have impact on our ability
to host more international visitors,” Mr Tuamoto said. “Having
said that, we do know that the hosting of the Pacific Games in
2023 will play a role in seeing our overall tourism infrastructure
expanded exponentially in the lead up to the event. But in the
meantime, our ongoing success in building ever-growing cruise
visitation is certainly bearing fruit for our tourism
aspirations.”
Mr Tuamoto pointed towards the return last week
of P&O’s Pacific Eden, visiting Honiara and Gizo for the second
time this year with more than 1200 passengers on board.
Three more vessels - Zegrahm Expeditions’
Caledonian Sky, Costa Cruises Costa Atlantica and Compagnie du
Ponant’s L’Austral are all due to visit before the end of the
year.
“We can readily attribute all these results to
efforts our government and tourism industry have gone to as part
of a very vigorous process to seize on the opportunity tourism
presents to the Solomon Islands,“ Mr Tuamoto said. “It’s taken a
great deal of hard work by everyone involved to turn what
represents huge potential into a hard reality and that is exactly
what we are seeing as we move towards the close of 2016. There can
be no doubt the platform has been laid this year and it has been a
solid effort. But we will need to redouble our efforts if we are
to continue in the same vein in 2017.”
See other recent
news regarding:
Solomon Islands,
Arrivals,
Cruise.
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