Spain Takes Steps to Bring International Tourists Back

Caribbean News…
24 May 2020 4:25am
Spain

Spain –the world’s No.2 travel destination– is reopening its borders to foreign tourists in July. Spain was also one of the worst hit by the coronavirus. Now as it emerges from one of the continent’s toughest lockdowns, foreign tourism has become part of the equation.

“As of July, Spain will be expecting you,” declared Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez Saturday. “The moment has arrived ...Foreign visitors can now start planning their holidays to Spain.”

According to Forbes magazine, the announcement came together with that of an official period of mourning in the country, lasting 10 days. (And news that the national top-tier football tournament, La Liga, can resume from June 8).

Just a week back, there was no clear horizon for Spanish holidays to return. Not without the threat of a 2 week quarantine on arrival. A measure in place since May 24, when borders reopened.

But now the country is welcoming tourists back with open arms, like some neighbors are, in hopes for economic salvation. On top of suffering a huge health blow from the corona crisis, the blow to Spanish tourism has been huge. 

After France and ahead of the U.S., this is the world’s second most visited tourism destination. Lured by a heady mix of golden beaches, party islands, and rich culture and history, 80 million foreigners visit each year.

Tourism accounts for approximately 12% of the country’s GDP. Through the 2 month lockdown, which began March 14, about 1 million tourism and hospitality sector workers have been temporarily laid off. Their jobs are partially underpinned by nearly 20 million British tourists, for whom Spain is no.1 holiday destination. Their return just got a whole lot more complicated, with U.K. quarantine measures coming into effect on June 8.

Safety is a lynchpin of the tourism restart Sánchez told a press conference. “Spain needs tourism and tourism needs safety ... We will guarantee that the tourists won’t be at risk and won’t bring any added risk to our country.”

Spain is planning a government certification scheme for Covid-compliant tourist establishments he said. Hotels, restaurants, tour operators and others will get a kind of corona-safety stamp of approval. The government will soon announce more details of the health protocols for the travel industry.

All this to avoid a repeat, or second wave of the coronavirus. Spain has suffered more than 28,500 deaths among nearly 235,000 COVID-19 infections. And the virus, while well down, still lurks. “The hardest part is over. We are seeing light at the end of the tunnel,” Sánchez said. On Friday, there were 56 deaths, and 446 new cases reported according to health officials.

When quarantine rules end, and beach resorts reopen, holidaymakers can expect strict sanitary measures too. From hand washing to social distancing on beaches. Similar to measures in Italy. But also in line with EU guidelines for summer tourism recovery.

On May 11, hotels and café terraces started reopening countrywide. Initially at about 30% capacity. Access to hotel common areas is closed. In the Balearic Islands most hotels so far have chosen to remain shut. Travel restrictions mean they have neither a Spanish nor foreign clientele. All that is about to change.

Domestic tourism was always the priority in Spain’s 4-phase lockdown exit. Spaniards have been given a green light to start planning holidays at home for June. “I publicly invite all tourism establishments to start getting ready from today to begin to reboot activity,” said the Spanish PM.

One big question remains: How keen will foreign tourists be to return to Spain? Once such a hotbed of the virus in Europe. "Now the epicenter has moved to other parts of the planet,” Sánchez said. The U.S. for a start. Nonetheless some tourism players in the U.K. feel it may take months for traveler confidence to return.

Back to top