Sunday, January 10, 2010

2010 - The Year of Sports Tourism

With a bumper calendar of mega sporting events, sport tourism is set to play a catalytic role in sparking the recovery of global tourism in 2010.

Travel experts predict that the travel industry’s fastest growing sector will post record profits and contribute an astonishing 14% of overall travel and tourism receipts in the year ahead.

July’s World Sport Destination Expo will play a pivotal role, offering the world’s leading sporting destinations a structured opportunity to sign future business and unlock new markets at the first exhibition dedicated to this booming sector.

With 2010 billed “the year of sports tourism”, analysts predict that Canada, South Africa, India, China and Spain are amongst those destinations set for a year of healthy growth.

February will see the Olympic Games return to Canada for the third time as Vancouver plays host to XXI Winter Olympic Games.

Government travel and tourism boards view the Games as a key event to generate interest in Canada, and revitalise its tourism-related industries.

South Africa expects more than 450,000 foreign arrivals for the month long 2010 FIFA World Cup which kick off in Joburg on June 11th.

According to Tourism Minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk, the combined success of 2009’s IPL, the British & Irish Lions tour and the Confederations Cup, laid the foundations for the 2010 FIFA World Cup to return South Africa to its pre-recession tourism high.

India’s tourism industry is counting on sports tourism to boost inbound visit numbers, which fell 6.3 per cent during 2009. Ashish Kishore, head of hotel and retail business Yatra.com expects October’s Commonwealth Games in Delhi to spark an upsurge in international visitors as well as boost traveller confidence. “If India gives a positive image to the world at that time, then it will be a golden period for Indian tourism,” he said.

The 2010 Asian Games being held in Guangzhou, China 12-27 November completes 2010’s quartet of mega event. Forecasters predict that the 16th Asian Games will break all visitor records as Guangzhou will stage the biggest event in the Asian Games 59-year history.

World Sport Destination Expo – the first ever exhibition dedicated to the $600 billion a year sport tourism industry – will take place in Johannesburg in the final week of the FIFA World Cup.

Source: Breaking Travel News

Sunday, January 3, 2010

Asian Sports Hub & Tourism Conference 2010

The sports tourism industry continues to be one of the most important economic drivers to growth in many economies, including in Asia. The region’s economic resilience and growth for the past ten years have created an increasing affluent population seeking new and exciting travel destinations within and outside Asia.

Alongside this growth in the aforementioned sector comes greater competition among nations to distinguish themselves from each other. Various nations are competing hard to host high profile events such as the Youth Olympics Games and F1 Grand Prix as the economic spin-offs created by these sporting projects are believed to be significant.

The Asian Sports Hub & Tourism Conference 2010 will be dedicated to the development of a world class sports city and a sustainable sports industry. This event aims to gather expertise from all over the world in engineering, building and construction, risk management, legal, financing, marketing and sponsorship, security, logistics, hospitality, sports medicine and sports products.

The two-day conference will be held at the Sheraton Hotel, Singapore on January 27 and 28, 2010.

For more information, visit the official website.

Source: Press Release