Egypt plans to attract 25m tourists by 2020
Source: www.voltairenet.org
Egyptian minister of tourism Mr. Zuhair Garana announced that the Egyptian government is planning to increase the number of tourists to reach 25 million tourists in 2020.
This will be achieved by offering excellent tourists services and offering different tourists product like environmental and recreational tourism with the aim of achieving the goal of sustainable tourism, the tourism Minister in Egypt added.
Egypt received more than 9 million tourists last year who spent 89 million nights in Egypt and spent about $8 bn.
 
Tourism on target

(piece of the article of Al-Ahrm weekly)

Amr El-Azaby, the new head of the Egyptian Tourist Authority, speaks with Rehab Saad about the pitfalls, and the potential, of promoting Egypt

Egypt's tourism industry expanded steadily in 2006, generating revenues of $7.6 billion from the just under 10 million tourists who spent 89.3 million nights in Egypt.
China and Russia emerged as growing and potentially lucrative markets. New hotels were built and more destinations created along Egypt's north western coast.

The ultimate aim, is to attract 25 million tourists by 2020, which will require the provision of 130,000 new hotel rooms and a significant diversification in products offered, as well as consolidating the Egyptian brand internationally.
 
The ETA, he explains, is committed to attracting growing numbers of tourists from existing markets and reducing the seasonal nature of tourism to Egypt, to which end it is heavily promoting new, integrated resorts on the Red Sea and Mediterranean coasts.

We have offices in all our major markets and run advertising campaigns abroad as well as organising trips for travel writers from overseas.
Hygiene and medical services, not only those offered to tourists but medical services in general, education, human resources, the ratio of airports to total population, the ratio of ATM machines, all featured in the evaluation.

"It was not," argues El-Azaby, "an assessment of the tourist sector but of the entire economy, and that is beyond the remit of the ETA."

"We have good resorts, we have excellent cultural resources and through our marketing strategy we try to emphasis our assets. I believe this is working. The flow of tourism is satisfactory, we received nine million tourists last year, up five per cent on the previous year which is a percentage point higher than the average international increase. We are continuing to work towards a 10 per cent increase by the end of this year."

"We are no longer in the crisis mode," he adds, noting that even markets that had been slipping, such as France's and Italy's, are now relatively buoyant.

"What is true," concedes El-Ezaby, "is that our main focus is on leisure tourism at the expense of other trends such as cultural tourism. We are not loosing ground in cultural tourism but we are not increasing proportionally. We also need to promote ourselves in new markets such as the weekend travellers, and up Egypt's profile in the areas of heritage and socio-ethnic/rural tourism.

Success in these areas, though, will depend on working with authorities other than those focussed exclusively on the tourist trade."

"Our current focus on the Red Sea and Sinai is largely a result of the fact that these areas currently account for 110,000 of Egypt's 180,000 hotel rooms. As a consequence they receive the largest share of our promotional budget."

Alexandria, Aswan, Luxor, and Nile cruises, are accorded a much lower profile, he says, because they do not yet have sufficient accommodation capacity to justify a blanket promotional campaign.

Despite the Arab market being the Egyptian tourist industry's second largest after the European, the ETA maintains no regional offices and depends instead on annual road shows and one-off promotions. It is a policy that has attracted criticism, with many arguing a more concerted campaign in Arab countries is needed.

"In an ideal world we would open offices in all our markets but we have to work within our budgetary constraints. Yes, Arab countries are the second largest source of tourist coming to Egypt but they account for only 20 per cent of the total, whereas Europe furnishes 70 per cent of all tourists to Egypt. We get 400,000 tourists from Libya, 380,000 from Saudi Arabia, 140,000 from Jordan and 100,000 from Syria. Compare that with the one million arriving from the UK, one million from Germany, and more than one million from Russia. We need greater presence in European markets than in Arab ones. Arab countries are of course important to us but I do not honestly see us opening offices in the foreseeable future. Where there is room for improvement, though, is in the road show formula, which could benefit from a greater focus on individual products and destinations -- the Red Sea, Nile cruises and so forth."

(Source) Al-Ahram WeeklyAl Ahram http://weekly.ahram.org.eg
28 June - 4 July 2007 - Issue No. 851

 
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