Indians Are The Second Highest Nationality To Arrive In Singapore

Singapore Tourism Board
Singapore Tourism Board Said that it Sees Spike in New Arrivals

Singapore: In the first six months of 2022 there has been a surge in visitors traveling to Singapore with Indians being the second highest nationality to arrive in the island nation after Indonesia. After Singapore reopened its borders in April to all vaccinated travelers, it received over 1.5 million visitors for the first half of 2022 which included over 219,000 Indian visitors. So, the Singapore tourism board said that it sees a spike in new arrivals and Indians being the second highest nationality to arrive.

The largest group of visitors is from neighbor Indonesia at 282,000.

Malaysia

Malaysia is third with 139,000 visiting Singapore by air, followed by Australia (125,000) and the Philippines (81,000). Together the top five account for over 56 percent of international visitors for the January to June period of this year.

Singapore

Singapore was one of the first in the region to reopen its borders with no quarantine and is also perceived to be a safe destination having seen to have handled the coronavirus outbreak well which encouraged a large number of visitors to the country.

Singapore Tourism Board

Singapore Tourism Board (STB) predicted that it expects international visitor arrivals to the city-state to reach as much as six million this year.

In terms of absolute year-on-year visitor growth, visitor arrivals from Indonesia expanded by 1,996 percent, India by 1,344 percent, and Malaysia by 2,000 percent.

This year, 84 percent of the 1.5 million visitors who arrived in the first six months came to Singapore after the border reopened to all vaccinated travelers in April.

For comparison, in the first six months of 2021, Singapore received 330,000 foreign visitors and in the same period of 2020, it received 2.74 million travelers, out of which 88 percent arrived in the pre-pandemic lockdown months of January and February that year.

With the significant increase in passenger and aircraft traffic, Singapore’s Changi Airport authorities announced the reopening of Terminal 4 on September 13 this year, which has been shut down ever since the pandemic hit the region.

The authorities reopened Terminal 2, in May, this year.

Terminal 4 has a capacity to handle 16 million passengers a year and airlines that will be moving there include Cathay Pacific, Korean Air, Air Asia, and Cebu Pacific.

In the first three months of this year, the airport handled an average of about 13,000 aircraft per month. In the months of April and May, 15,100 and 17,100 airplanes took off and landed at the airport.

Last year, for the first five months of 2021, a monthly average of 7,800 commercial planes passed through Changi.
The number of passengers flowing through the airport has also markedly increased. In the three months between January and March 2022, before Singapore fully opened to all vaccinated travelers, a total of 2,563,000 passengers passed through Changi. The numbers for April and May are 1,930,000 and 2,470,000 respectively. By comparison, for the first five months of 2021, 773,000 went through the gates at Changi.

Singapore Airlines

Singapore Airlines, last week released its operating statistics for the month of June, saying, “Robust demand for air travel during the mid-year holidays, coupled with the start of the summer travel season, has resulted in an exceptionally strong performance in June 2022.” This was with the exception of China, Japan, and Taiwan, where there are still travel restrictions in force.

In June 2022, the Airlines Group carried a total of 1,938,200 passengers, with a significant rise of 13.7 percent from May.

Group passenger capacity (measured in available seat kilometers) in June 2022 was three percentage points higher than the month before and 36 percent higher compared a year ago. It is now at 64 percent of pre-pandemic levels.

The Group passenger load factor (PLF) reached a new pandemic high of 85.5 percent, an increase of 7.3 percentage points month-on-month and 69.4 percentage points year on year.

SIA

This was on the back of SIA posting a monthly PLF of 87.8 percent, a record for the airline.
Earlier this month, the airline announced that it plans to progressively restore all its flights in India to pre-pandemic levels by the end of October.

SIA will gradually increase its flight frequency and operate 17 weekly services to Chennai, up from the current 10 flights per week.

Kochi services will go up to 14 times weekly, up from the current seven flights per week. Bengaluru services will go up to 16 times weekly, up from the current seven flights per week.

The vibrant and colorful calendar of events on the island continues to profit from the influx of tourists. The Singapore Tourism Board (STB) expects will bring in the crowds are the Formula 1 Grand Prix, the Bloomberg New Economy Forum, Hell’s Museum at Haw Par Villa, the Museum of Ice Cream, SkyHelix Sentosa, and the “Avatar: The Experience” at Gardens by the Bay.

Keith Tan, Chief Executive, Singapore Tourism Board said, “The encouraging growth in visitor arrivals and tourism receipts signals strong pent-up demand, and underscores Singapore’s continued appeal as a vibrant and attractive destination for leisure and business travelers. While the pandemic is certainly not over yet, we are confident that Singapore’s very rich calendar of events, as well as new and refreshed tourism offerings, will continue to attract visitors for the rest of 2022 and beyond.”

Despite the optimistic outlook, STB cautioned that “tourism flows will face some headwinds for the rest of the year because of the volatile global political and economic environment, as well as the evolving health situation.”

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