Paris Suffers Slump in Christmas Bookings After Terror Attacks

By Publications Checkout
Paris Suffers Slump in Christmas Bookings After Terror Attacks

Passenger bookings for flights arriving in Paris during the Christmas period are down 13 per cent on last year after the 13 November terrorist attacks, with visits from the US, Spain, Japan and Germany worst affected, according to a study based on figures from 200,000 travel agencies.

While a 25 per cent jump in cancellations the week after the tragedy has now eased, new bookings remain “dramatically below” last year’s level, travel-data specialist ForwardKeys said, citing reservation numbers through 20 November.

"The booking situation for arrivals during the Christmas holidays has become worrisome,” ForwardKeys Chief Executive Officer Olivier Jaeger said in an interview, citing figures for arrivals in the 25 December to 31 December period. “Paris will rebound. The question is, when will that start?”

France is the world’s biggest vacation destination, leaving it vulnerable to changes in consumer behavior. While Air France has said traffic immediately after the attacks remained in line with forecasts, past outrages have tended to produce a fall off in demand that recovers over weeks or months.

Cancellations were highest last weekend, according to ForwardKeys, with the second-most affected travel period being immediately prior to the start of United Nation climate talks in Paris on 30 November.

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Ten days after the attacks that killed 130 people, European leaders are tightening border controls and meeting to seek a durable strategy for tackling Islamic State. The British Airline Pilots Association said separately that the expertise of air crew should be tapped to help assess safety risks.

Last week, the EU said it was weighing up passport screening at its outer borders for all travellers. 

News by Bloomberg, edited by Hospitality Ireland