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TARGETS 8M VISITORS FOR 2023
added. “We’re continuing them and, over the course of the next several months, you’ll hear more about this. But these are going to happen between March and November.
“So we are continuing the things that worked in 2022. Were adding to those things that worked in 2022, and we anticipate that overall stopover visitors will be at least 20 percent ahead. We anticipate that we’re going to hit the eight million tourism arrival mark in 2023.”
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To help accommodate the anticipated surge in tourism arrivals, Mr Cooper said he expects the British Colonial will undergo a phased re-opening beginning this summer. He added that he is awaiting an update from the resort’s owner, China Construction America (CCA), on their intentions and plans.
“We are anticipating that parts of the hotel will be open during the summer months based on the most recent information received from the owners of the resort, and they are pushing to have the hotel fully opened by the end of the year - by the winter season,” he said.
Returning to the 2022 tourism statistics, Mr Cooper added: “It was a phenomenal year in terms of our overall arrivals. More than seven million, and the only time we’ve done this before was in 2019, which was a record-setting year.
This is significant for tourism, it’s significant for the economy, significant for the people of The Bahamas.
“We don’t celebrate numbers for the celebration of numbers themselves. But we believe tourism is really the catalyst for national development. It is really the driver for Bahamian empowerment. This is how Bahamians continue to be well-off. This is how we will continue to create businesses.
“We’ve been talking about linkages with tourism now for decades. The Tourism Development Corporation now will do something about it. Seven million [visitors] is really a marketplace for the expansion of the economy, and for the empowerment of Bahamians, and that’s how we hope to look at it.”
Many of 2022’s visitors were “first time” arrivals, and multiple Family Islands are seeing increased numbers except for Abaco, which is still “trailing slightly around 80 percent of preDorian and pre pandemic levels”.
John Rolle, the Central Bank’s governor, in his 2022 year-end and fourth quarter economic briefing on Monday, said that while tourism’s full recovery from COVID’s ravages is “incomplete” it is “considerably advanced”. He added that November’s stopover, or air, arrivals exceeded the pre-pandemic record of the same month in 2018, which the Central Bank is using for comparative purposes because it excludes Hurricane Dorian’s impact.
“In the overall trends, the gains from recovered stopover volumes were amplified by rising average nightly room rates for both resort properties and vacation rental units,” Mr Rolle said. “In the stopover segment, by November, the seasonal rebound in air arrivals had broken even the pre-pandemic high for the same month, which is a comparison against November 2018 that also preceded Hurricane Dorian. “On a monthly basis, the cruise sector’s seasonal rebound had already significantly eclipsed the prepandemic base. However, both cruise and stopover visitors still have calendar year shortfalls to recoup. For the 11 months through November, total air arrivals had converged to just 82 percent of the pre-pandemic high, and sea arrivals were at about 95 percent of the same comparisons.
“This remaining calendar year performance gap in both markets underscores the further healthy boost in the annual visitor volumes that is expected to occur during 2023.... The Bahamas is still in recovery mode, benefiting from significant pent-up demand for travel and capacity that is still being restored in the airline and hotel sectors. This will allow the economy to experience above average growth again in 2023.”
NOTICE is hereby given that WILBENET PETIT-FRERE of Marathon, New Providence, The Bahamas is applying to the Minister responsible for Nationality and Citizenship, for registration/naturalization as a citizen of The Bahamas, and that any person who knows any reason why registration/ naturalization should not be granted, should send a written and signed statement of the facts within twenty-eight days from the 1st day of February, 2023 to the Minister responsible for nationality and Citizenship, P.O. Box N-7147, Nassau, Bahamas.





Mr Rolle said the various “headwinds”, or downside risks for The Bahamas, which he identified as inflation, COVID-19, global energy (oil) costs, the war in Ukraine and rising global interest rates, were “not likely to contract the economy in the near-term”.