S.Africa sees tourism boon in big nations’ World Cup scores
Halfway through the World Cup, tourism officials say football fans
have already brought an economic windfall that looks set to keep rolling
as a raft of big countries play in the second round.
Business is booming with foreign fans at bars and restaurants, which
are also boosted by plenty of local support for big guns like England,
Portugal and Brazil after hosts South Africa bowed out.
Cape Town’s dockside V&A Waterfront shopping and entertainment
complex has proved a magnet for fans ahead of every match at the nearby
Green Point stadium, where Portugal plays Spain on Tuesday in a game
sure to pack in fans of all stripes.
“On a daily basis it’s more or less in the figure of 100,000 coming
through with spikes on match day,” said Waterfront spokeswoman Annemie
Liebenberg.
“These loyal supporters travel with their teams. It’s absolutely
fantastic to have the big guys still.”
South African Tourism head Thandiwe January-McLean admitted this week
that the industry wanted the world’s tourism giants to stay in the
tournament.
“For us Germany and England and those countries are important because
they have been core markets in which we have been working,” she said.
“Seeing them qualify is, from a touristic point of view, in our
interest, if truth be told.”
Gillian Saunders of Grant Thornton consultancy said South Africa
looked on track to earn about 8.8 billion rands (1.1 billion dollars,
934 million euros) from tourism during the World Cup.
That’s just a slice of the 93 billion rands that the games are
expected to have generated for the economy. Most of that amount was
construction spending by government to build stadiums and overhaul the
transport system over the last four years.
South Africa had to scale down its initially rosy expectations for
450,000 foreign visitors over the four weeks, lowering the number last
month to 300,000.
But coming during the winter months that are normally low season for
tourism, the football fans have given South Africa a second peak season
with numbers that match its busy summer travel months.
The country spent about 100 million dollars on its World Cup
marketing campaign, but January-McLean said the marketing benefits were
invaluable from hosting one of the world’s most-watched sporting events.
“From a touristic point of view this has been a fabulous opportunity,
just given the exposure that South Africa has received all over the
world.” Hotels are around 85 percent full in Johannesburg, the most
convenient jumping-off point for most stadiums, according to SA Tourism.
Cape Town says on average its hotels have been at 40 percent over the
last two weeks, but accommodation closest to the stadium is booked solid
and tour operators report a 20 percent jump in business against last
June.
For normally quiet towns like the central city of Bloemfontein, where
England and Germany face off on Sunday, bars, restaurants and hotels
have seen swarms of visitors around games.
Even Port Elizabeth, one of the most distant host cities, has reveled
in the flood of visitors.
“It was absolute chaos! From 10 past six until quarter to four this
morning, we were upside down, inside out,” said Sandy Nel, owner of News
Cafe in Port Elizabeth, where England secured its second round entry on
Wednesday.
The outlet saw a 200 percent turnover rise and sold 3,135 units of
beer, said Nel.
“We sold the most beer we’ve ever sold in the nine years we’ve been
in existence.”
CAPE TOWN, Sunday (AFP) |