Surveys, Trends & Stats Survey: Paris Terror Attack Impact on Travel Demand by GTP editing team 17 November 2015 written by GTP editing team 17 November 2015 0 comments Share 0FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 11 Some 20 percent of travel and risk managers are likely to cancel travel to France and to and within Europe for some period of time, according to a survey conducted by Business Travel Coalition (BTC) over the weekend into Monday in response to the terror attacks in Paris last Friday evening. The purpose of the survey was to provide an early snapshot for travel and risk managers to understand how companies and other organizations are responding regarding potential near-term travel policy changes. Eighty-four corporate, university and government travel, sourcing and risk managers from 17 countries participated in the survey. According to the survey, the fear of terrorist threats affects not only travel to France, but travel to Europe in general. The survey underlines that if the French government investigation determines that Friday’s terror attack was just one of many more in the planning stages, then 30 percent of organizations indicate that they will likely cancel travel to France until strategic modifications to travel policy are considered. “Of course, additional terror attacks could cause further significant erosion in travel demand affecting all travel sectors”, BTC says. BTC’s survey also revealed that: 20% are somewhat likely to cancel travel to to/within Europe for some period of time. 70% are very or somewhat likely to allow employees discretion with regard to travel to France. 55% are very or somewhat likely to allow employees discretion with regard to travel to/within Europe. 16% are very or somewhat likely to cancel travel to France until the investigation determines if the attack is just one of many in the planning stages. 5% are very or somewhat likely to cancel travel to/within Europe until the investigation determines if the attack is just one of many more in the planning stages. 35% are very or somewhat likely to cancel travel to/within Europe if the attack is just one of many more in the planning stages until strategic modifications to travel policy are considered. 55% indicate their company’s Duty-of-Care policy will drive any modification to travel policy. According to BTC, the results are prospective in the sense that any travel policy changes, for most organizations, have not yet been decided upon, but rather, are under consideration in real time. “As the French government investigation proceeds, and facts change, e.g., discovery of additional imminent attacks, or actual attacks, organizational responses regarding travel policy could change significantly”, BTC says and underlines that the survey results aim to act as a baseline for future surveys to gauge response to moving circumstances. “The airline industry is a highly leveraged one in the sense that the last several passengers that board an airplane can often make the difference between profit and loss on any given flight. As such, the percentages of potential restraint on demand discovered in this survey should be of concern to governments, airlines, hotel and rental car companies and other travel and tourism providers. In the coming days airline and other booking data should shed more light on the terror attack’s impact on travel demand”, BTC notes. Founded in 1994, the mission of Business Travel Coalition is to interpret industry and government policies and practices and provide a platform so that the managed travel community can influence issues of strategic importance to their organizations. Follow GTP Headlines on Google News to keep up to date with all the latest on tourism and travel in Greece. Share 0 FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail GTP editing team This is the team byline for GTP. The copyrights for these articles are owned by GTP. They may not be redistributed without the permission of the owner. previous post Mouzenidis Announces Fleet Increase for Ellinair, New Offices in Cyprus and Germany next post British Airways to Fly Direct to Kalamata from London You may also like Global Air Passenger Demand Reaches Record High in 2024, IATA Reports 5 February 2025 Greek Hotels See Revenue Boost in 2024, Driven by Higher Room Prices 4 February 2025 European Aviation Sector Calls for Stronger EU Support to Reach Net-Zero by... 4 February 2025 Greece Among Top Choices for Long-Haul Travelers in Winter/Spring 2025 3 February 2025 Greece and Turkey Top Destinations for Bulgarian Travelers in 2024 3 February 2025 Study: London Becomes Top Destination for Greek Travelers in 2024 31 January 2025 Leave a Comment Cancel Reply Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ