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March 26, 2019

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Improved infrastructure in Tibet gives a boost to tourism industry

It was four days away from the opening of the annual peach blossom festival and workers were busy setting the steel-structured stage. Yet, hundreds of tourists were already bustling under the wild peach groves in the mountains of Kala Village, Nyingchi City, in the plateau region of Tibet.

Undaunted by the effects of acute mountain sickness, Wang Xiaofang and her husband drove all the way from the southernmost province of Hainan to the village.

“Hainan has all sorts of flowers except peach blossom,” said Wang, who posed for a selfie against the blue sky and distant snow-capped mountains.

Tibet’s exotic culture and stunning landscape, despite its average altitude of 4,000 meters, proved too much to resist and they started a two-week holiday in the autonomous region.

The couple is part of a tourism boom in Tibet, which is expected to register 40 million tourist arrivals this year, up from 10 million in 2012.

A key factor accounting for this spike is Tibet’s improved transport system, such as an expanding network of highways and an increase in flight links with other regions as well as hospitality facilities.

“I could only find hotels in the seat of county when I first drove to Tibet 10 years ago,” said Zeng Weijun, from the coastal city of Zhanjiang in south China’s Guangdong Province. “Now I can find hotels in the town and even in the village.”

In the village of Zhaxigang in Nyingchi City, 54 out of 68 households have opened home-inns to cater for the rising number of tourists. Nyingchi boasts of beautiful flowers, mountains, canyons, waterfalls and glaciers and is a top tourist destination besides the regional capital of Lhasa.

Just 3km away from the village, Lulang International Tourism Town with an investment of 3.8 billion yuan (US$567 million) from Guangdong, received more than a million tourists last year, with sales revenue of 50 million yuan. The regional government expects to further boost the tourism sector, which accounted for more than a third of the region’s economy in 2018, up from 29 percent in 2017.

Tibet’s GDP grew by 9.1 percent in 2018, and was among the nation’s fastest.

A new 450km-long railway is being built between Lhasa and Nyingchi, a sure impetus to tourism. It is part of a grand plan to build a new railway from Lhasa to Chengdu, capital city of neighboring Sichuan Province in Tibet’s southeast, via Nyingchi.

In a bid to attract more tourists during the winter, the region has rolled out a spate of preferential policies including waiving admission charges for some scenic spots and discounted flight tickets during the winter season.

Tibet received 2.46 million tourists from November 1 last year to March 15, up 84.2 percent year on year, and the region’s tourism industry brought in around 2.62 billion yuan during the same period, a year-on-year growth of 41.1 percent, according to the regional tourism department.




 

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