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China's peak Chinese New Year air travel season fizzles as COVID

BEIJING: Iphie Nie, a 30-year-old designer in Beijing who usually travels to visit family in her hometown of Shenzhen during the Chinese New Year, has like many Chinese reluctantly decided against booking a flight for the mid-February holiday.

To limit the spread of COVID-19, the government has discouraged travel in what is normally the busiest time of the year. Those who are going anyway must present a nucleic acid test with negative results taken in the seven days before returning home.

As a result, airline bookings made as of Jan 19 for Chinese New Year travel have plunged 73.7 per cent compared with the holiday period in 2019, according to data from travel analytics firm ForwardKeys provided to Reuters.

ForwardKeys did not provide 2020 data, saying the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak distorted the numbers.

Bookings had been down 57.3 per cent from 2019 as of Jan 1, with the situation deteriorating due to outbreaks leading to tighter restrictions.

"Even though I'm in a low-risk area, people in my hometown would get a bit nervous when they hear that I just got back from Beijing. It's just too much trouble," Nie said.

Beijing has reported new COVID-19 cases for 11 consecutive days and nationwide case numbers, while tiny by the standards of most Western countries, are at 10-month highs.

Many employees working for state-owned companies or government agencies have been told not to travel without management approval, state media reported.

Some people who already bought air tickets are considering cancelling.

"I've already booked a ticket but I still haven't made up my mind yet," said Kathy Qi, a 29-year-old office worker in Beijing from Henan.

A vendor wearing a mask to protect from coronavirus uses a pole to lower lanterns on sale for the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year in Wuhan, Jan 22, 2021. (Photo: AP/Ng Han Guan)

A report by aviation data provider Variflight predicts a reduction of six million trips over the Chinese New Year as a result of the COVID-19 test requirement and home quarantine rules, with about 50 per cent of travellers likely to cancel.

Ticket prices, normally at their peak during the Chinese New Year, have plunged. As of Jan 25, flight tickets sold on Qunar.com, a Beijing-based online travel platform, averaged 651.36 yuan (US$100) during the holiday, the lowest level in five years, the company said on Monday.

In China, domestic airline capacity had recovered to 2019 levels by the end of last year when there were almost no cases, though ticket prices remained low.

Luya You, transportation analyst at BOCOM International, said a full recovery of Chinese airline revenue to pre-crisis levels would be delayed to the second or third quarter this year, compared with her earlier assessment of January or February.

ForwardKeys said travellers had been booking tickets later than usual, with 61 per cent of Chinese doing so within four days of departure in March to December last year, up from 52 per cent in 2019.

"This is the one statistic that gives some hope for travel this Chinese New Year, as a rush in last-minute bookings is a definite possibility if the recent outbreak is brought under control soon," ForwardKeys spokesman David Tarsh said.

However, Nie, the designer, said she was too concerned about the possibility of increased restrictions to book a last-minute ticket home.

"What if I need to be isolated at home for 14 days when I get back? And I only have 10 days off for the holiday," she said.

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Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)

BEIJING: Iphie Nie, a 30-year-old designer in Beijing who usually travels to visit family in her hometown of Shenzhen during the Chinese New Year, has like many Chinese reluctantly decided against booking a flight for the mid-February holiday.

To limit the spread of COVID-19, the government has discouraged travel in what is normally the busiest time of the year. Those who are going anyway must present a nucleic acid test with negative results taken in the seven days before returning home.

As a result, airline bookings made as of Jan 19 for Chinese New Year travel have plunged 73.7 per cent compared with the holiday period in 2019, according to data from travel analytics firm ForwardKeys provided to Reuters.

ForwardKeys did not provide 2020 data, saying the early days of the COVID-19 outbreak distorted the numbers.

Bookings had been down 57.3 per cent from 2019 as of Jan 1, with the situation deteriorating due to outbreaks leading to tighter restrictions.

"Even though I'm in a low-risk area, people in my hometown would get a bit nervous when they hear that I just got back from Beijing. It's just too much trouble," Nie said.

Beijing has reported new COVID-19 cases for 11 consecutive days and nationwide case numbers, while tiny by the standards of most Western countries, are at 10-month highs.

Many employees working for state-owned companies or government agencies have been told not to travel without management approval, state media reported.

Some people who already bought air tickets are considering cancelling.

"I've already booked a ticket but I still haven't made up my mind yet," said Kathy Qi, a 29-year-old office worker in Beijing from Henan.

A vendor wearing a mask to protect from coronavirus uses a pole to lower lanterns on sale for the upcoming Chinese Lunar New Year in Wuhan, Jan 22, 2021. (Photo: AP/Ng Han Guan)

A report by aviation data provider Variflight predicts a reduction of six million trips over the Chinese New Year as a result of the COVID-19 test requirement and home quarantine rules, with about 50 per cent of travellers likely to cancel.

Ticket prices, normally at their peak during the Chinese New Year, have plunged. As of Jan 25, flight tickets sold on Qunar.com, a Beijing-based online travel platform, averaged 651.36 yuan (US$100) during the holiday, the lowest level in five years, the company said on Monday.

In China, domestic airline capacity had recovered to 2019 levels by the end of last year when there were almost no cases, though ticket prices remained low.

Luya You, transportation analyst at BOCOM International, said a full recovery of Chinese airline revenue to pre-crisis levels would be delayed to the second or third quarter this year, compared with her earlier assessment of January or February.

ForwardKeys said travellers had been booking tickets later than usual, with 61 per cent of Chinese doing so within four days of departure in March to December last year, up from 52 per cent in 2019.

"This is the one statistic that gives some hope for travel this Chinese New Year, as a rush in last-minute bookings is a definite possibility if the recent outbreak is brought under control soon," ForwardKeys spokesman David Tarsh said.

However, Nie, the designer, said she was too concerned about the possibility of increased restrictions to book a last-minute ticket home.

"What if I need to be isolated at home for 14 days when I get back? And I only have 10 days off for the holiday," she said.

Download our app or subscribe to our Telegram channel for the latest updates on the coronavirus outbreak: https://cna.asia/telegram

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