Greece crisis hits last-minute holiday bookings

Greece crisis hits last-minute holiday bookings

BERLIN / ATHENS - Reuters
Greece crisis hits last-minute holiday bookings

AP photo

Greece’s debt crisis has hit tourism, with last-minute bookings falling sharply, although the impact on the industry may be limited because the flare-up has come late in the season when most summer holidays are already booked.

The Greek Tourism Confederation said it has seen a 30 percent drop in last-minute bookings, which typically account for one-fifth of bookings to the country.

“We believe that a swift conclusion to the Greek government’s negotiations with the country’s creditors would still give us sufficient time to make up for the loss - as far as possible - in last-minute bookings,” Andreas Andreadis, chairman of the confederation, said.

Travel website Opodo.de said Greece flight bookings from Germany, which had been tracking the levels of the previous year, suddenly dropped off after June 26, when talks broke down between Greece and its euro zone creditors.

Between June 27 and July 6, daily flight bookings have been down most days by around 30-35 percent from the previous year, with one day showing a decrease of 68 percent, it said in data made available to Reuters.

Other German travel sites Kayak.de and Swoodoo.de, part of the Priceline Group, said in the week before Sunday’s referendum on whether to accept the terms of a bailout searches for flights to Greece were down 8 percent compared with the previous year.

Skyscanner.de said searches for flights were down 10 percent and flight prices had dropped around 7 percent.

The reduction in bookings seems particularly to affect Germans. Skyscanner said earlier this week that interest from Britain and Spain had actually increased. Some European tourists were switching holiday plans to Greece from Tunisia following an attack on tourists there.

Capital controls imposed since June 29, which limit withdrawals from cash machines and payments abroad, mean governments have advised tourists visiting Greece to bring euros in cash for spending money.

Airlines stop allowing Greek companies to sell their tickets

Several airlines, including Emirates, Qatar Airways and Turkish Airlines, have stopped allowing Greek travel agents to sell their tickets, said Lysandros Tsilidis, president of the Hellenic Association of Travel and Tourist Agencies (HATTA).

“We consider this inexcusably tough,” he said. “Even though they have been our partners for years and even though we have already paid 82 percent of what we owe to them during this season.”

Airlines association IATA has set up emergency procedures for its clearing house system which serves 400 airlines. Travel agents in Greece will be required to send funds to a Greek bank account on a weekly rather than fortnightly basis from July 15. Under the capital controls, the money still cannot leave the country.

“While we understand and sympathize with the difficulties facing agents on the ground in Greece, this action is being taken in response to the extraordinary circumstances facing the country,” an IATA spokesman said.

Turkish Airlines and Emirates confirmed they had stopped issuing tickets through Greek tour operators and travel agents. Emirates said its customers could still book tickets for its flights via its sales office in Athens, on the phone or online.

“These measures will be reviewed again in due course and we apologize for any inconvenience caused to both our customers and valued travel partners in the interim,” the Dubai-based airline said in an emailed statement to Reuters. Qatar Airways did not respond to requests for comment.

Other major European carriers are continuing to sell tickets, although customers with Greek bank cards may have difficulty paying airlines that process payments elsewhere.

Low-cost carrier Ryanair, which usually sells its tickets online, said last week it would allow Greek customers to pay with cash.

Lufthansa said it and group airlines Austrian, Swiss and Brussels were continuing to sell tickets paid for by credit cards with no restrictions.

AerCap, the world’s largest independent aircraft leasing company, which counts Aegean Airlines as a customer, said it was seeing no problems with payments yet but there may be a temporary decline in revenue from Greece.

“Maybe we’ll take a couple of airplanes back and move them somewhere else,” CEO Aengus Kelly said in Dublin on Wednesday. “But we would certainly be of the opinion that in the long run, the tourism demand will still be there in the Greek market.”