Asia
Europe
Africa
North America
Central America
Oceania
Caribbean
South America
 
Tourist5.com
Home > Travel News > Tourist industry lowering prices
Tourist industry lowering prices
Air Travel
Consolidators
Guides and Directories
Images Galleries
Intl. Travel Agency
Lodging
Preparation
Publication
Specialty Travel
Transportation

Travel insurance

Travel News By Xin Dingding

Top scenic spots in southern China have lowered prices to attract tourists back to areas pummeled by blizzards in January and February.

Some scenic spots received no visitors for 20 consecutive days during and after the worst weather in 50 years, while many others suffered a dramatic drop in business.

The total loss across the country is estimated at 6.97 billion yuan (US$980.3 million), according to the China National Tourism Administration (CNTA).

Many scenic spots are offering attractive discounts to individual tourists and favorable policies to tour operators in a bid to recoup the losses.

Hunan province's Zhangjiajie, the UNESCO World Heritage site famous for its stands of wondrous caves, said it would prolong its off-season policy favoring tour group operators until the end of the month, four weeks longer than usual.

Jinggangshan, also dubbed the cradle of China's revolution, is offering a 20 percent discount off the entrance fee (156 yuan per capita) before March 15.

Huangshan, or Yellow Mountain, in Anhui province, cut the off-season entrance fee from 120 yuan to 100 yuan in February.

"The price-cut has worked. Most tourists who came shortly after the disaster are from neighboring cities. Through them, more people know we are ready," said Hu Liming, vice-director of Huangshan Management Committee.

A senior official with the CNTA said the disaster dealt "another heavy blow to China's tourism" five years after the SARS outbreak.

"Infrastructure can be repaired in a short period of time, but some natural sceneries are unlikely to be restored for a while," said Wu Wenxue, director general of the planning and finance department of the CNTA, at a conference yesterday in Beijing.

Photographers' favorite scenes - yellow and golden flowers of oil seed rapes stretching from mountain to mountain during spring - are unlikely to appear this year in Guizhou province, Yang Jun, deputy chairman of Guizhou Tourism Association, said.

"Most rapes have been frozen to death in the icy weather in late January and early February, except for a few patches in western and northern Guizhou," he said.

Bamboo forests in Jinggangshan of Jiangxi province were partly destroyed



Want to list with Travel Directory?
Increase your opportunities with Tourist5.com
Learn more
About Us | Contact Us | Add a Site | Link to Us
Partner sites: Autos Services | florist flower shop
Hotel reservation | Travel forums

Tourist5.com Travel Guides ©Copyright Tourist5 Travel Directory, Inc., 2005. All rights reserved. Privacy