European summer holiday season is on, says TUI

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European Summer Holiday Season Is On, Says Tui
TUI Group is sticking to its plan to operate 75% of pre-pandemic capacity. Photo: PA Images.
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By Sarah Young, Reuters

TUI Group expects a strong 2021 holiday season and is sticking to its plan to operate 75 per cent of pre-pandemic capacity.

The group made the announcement on Wednesday after reporting six-month losses of more than a billion euros.

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The world's biggest holiday group said that increasing Covid-19 vaccination means Europe will reopen for travel, though ongoing restrictions and uncertainty have so far held back an expected surge in demand after winter lockdowns.

We are now at the beginning of the expected restart. The anticipation is palpable

TUI, which took 23 million people on holiday annually before the pandemic, said it has a total of 2.6 million summer bookings, 69 per cent lower than at this time in 2019.

The group said it was optimistic, however, given that new bookings had doubled since April and it expects more destinations to open in the next few weeks.

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"We are now at the beginning of the expected restart. The anticipation is palpable, these are opportunities for tourism and for TUI," chief executive Fritz Joussen said in a statement.

Travel companies and airlines across Europe will be buoyed by TUI's optimism about the coming holiday season, having suffered huge losses during 14 months of restrictions.

Destination desperation

Southern Europe economies are also desperate for holidaymakers to return. In Greece, tourism accounts for about a fifth of the economy and jobs market, while Spain used to derive a tenth of its gross domestic product from tourism.

Britain, which along with Germany is one of TUI's two biggest markets, last week said that people could travel again from May 17th, but its limited list of destinations not requiring passengers to quarantine on return disappointed the travel industry.

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Some of TUI's most popular destinations, such as Spain and Greece, were kept off its green list of low-risk destinations, but the company said it expects this to change when the list is reviewed at the end of the month.

Since the Covid-19 pandemic struck Europe last February, TUI has required multiple bailouts from the German government to survive.

Reporting results for the six months to March 31st, TUI said it had sunk to an EBIT loss of €1.3 billion on revenue that contracted by 89 per cent to €716 million.

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