COVID-19 Restarting Travel & Tourism in Greece Greece Set to See Tourism Revival in 2022 Despite ‘Omicron’ by GTP editing team 16 February 2022 written by GTP editing team 16 February 2022 1 comment Share 0FacebookTwitterLinkedinWhatsappEmail 16 Greece is among European tourism destinations expected to recover losses incurred by the Covid-19 pandemic thanks in large part to its high vaccination rates, found a report released recently by data analysis and tourism intelligence provider Mabrian Technologies. According to the data comparing Omicron, vaccination rates and the outbound air capacity of the UK, Germany, France, Spain and Italy for the summer of 2022 towards their most popular international holiday destinations, air capacity for Spain, Portugal, Italy and Greece this summer is set to return to pre-pandemic 2019 levels. More specifically, according to Mabrian Technologies, air capacity for the from May 1 to October 30, 2022 is up over 2019 levels in Greece by 2 percent and in Portugal by 1 percent. Air capacity is down in the same period in France by 19 percent, in Italy by 2 percent, and in Spain by 1 percent. “Essentially Omicron pushed many more people to become fully vaccinated and our research shows that all the main outbound markets for European holidays have seen quite significant jumps in vaccination rates during that time,” said Mabrian Director of Sales & Marketing Carlos Cendra. “At the same time, many more people have now been infected than before, or have had their third dose, giving them temporary confidence that they can travel,” he added. The study’s analysts note that despite Omicron, air capacity in the winter months is usually down for seasonal destinations such as Greece, Spain, Italy, Portugal, and France. “In recent months the capacity evolution hasn’t varied from a ’normal’ year. In other words, Omicron didn’t impact them,” they said. The analysts go on to add that there is no indication that demand for domestic travel is falling across Europe, “which means that overall destinations could see themselves entering into overall visitors figures and occupancy rates higher than before the pandemic”. “One thing is for sure: based on current scheduled capacity, inbound international arrivals the main European destinations are essentially back up to 2019 levels,” said Cendra. Join the 15,000+ travel executives who read our newsletter 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 Helpdesk: New Service for Greek Hoteliers Informs on Business Growth Funding next post Direct Flights from Canada to Athens Starting April 2 You may also like Greece’s Hotel Market Sees Major Investments Over Four Months 5 February 2025 Greek Tourism Ministry Monitors Santorini Situation as Seismic Activity Continues 5 February 2025 Global Air Passenger Demand Reaches Record High in 2024, IATA Reports 5 February 2025 Greek PM Reassures Public About Santorini’s Ongoing Seismic Activity 5 February 2025 Milos: Ministry Suspends 5-star Hotel Construction Near Sarakiniko Beach 5 February 2025 ELIME and HELMEPA Join Forces for Safer, More Sustainable Greek Ports 5 February 2025 1 comment John Zoumboulis 17 February 2022 - 20:21 “Thanks is large part to high vaccination rates…” what a load of crock. These “experts” think that everyone is brain dead. Reply Leave a Comment Cancel Reply Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment. Δ