Oceanian tourists to Africa

African to introduce Chinese and Oceanian tourism.

Oceania – Africa Tourism 4.0

Cruise tourism has started the year with a bang after a luxury ship arrived at the port of Mombasa 

Kenya tourism has started the new year with a bang, after a luxury ship docked at the Indian Ocean tourist city of Mombasa, on its vintage cruise safari to the Eastern Africa coast.

China – AFRICA 4.0

The Chinese are joining the queues to enter our favourite tourist places in ever greater numbers. China is finally engaging with the world and, in tourism at least, the effects are phenomenal.

China’s tourists have been increasing in double digits since 2010, and most experts agree that 200 million Chinese will be travelling abroad every year by 2021. Is moment for African coutries to tap Chinese tourists.

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African entrepeneurs to Chinese and Oceanian businesses.

The government plans to talk about speeding up future investment in its flagship Eastern Economic Corridor (EEC) project in line with China's One Belt One Road initiative,  Triangular trade

China – ASEAN – Africa

Triangular tourism 4.0 at Sylodium, build your own circuit business.

Our logical business system, allows you to segment your target markets to be seen, and dominate the bilateral trade niches you choose from China or Oceania or ASEAN to Africa.

 

Global tourism surges +7% to 1.32bn in 2017, says UNWTO

New from TRBusiness

led by Europe’s Mediterranean destinations, generating +8% more international arrivals than in 2016. Africa registered an +8% increase in tourism, followed by Asia Pacific (+6%), the Middle East (+5%) and the Americas (+3%).

Tourism in Europe and the Americas is forecast to grow approximately +3.5%-4.5%, Asia Pacific by +5%-6%, Africa by +5%-7% and the Middle East by +4%-6%.

International tourist arrivals in Europe reached 671m in 2017 – that’s a ‘remarkable’ +8% climb following a comparatively weaker 2016. Growth was driven by an ‘extraordinary’ +13% rise in tourists in Southern and Mediterranean Europe. Western Europe (+7%), Northern Europe (+5%) and Central and Eastern Europe (+5%) also recorded robust growth.

Last year, Asia Pacific recorded 324m international tourist arrivals in 2017 – representing an increase of +6%. Arrivals in South Asia grew by +10%. South-East Asia recorded an increase of +8% and Oceania generated +7% growth. Arrivals to North-East Asia also increased +3%.

The Americas grew +3%, welcoming 207m international tourist arrivals in 2017, with most destinations enjoying positive results. South America led growth in the region with an increase of +7%, followed by Central America (+4%) and the Caribbean (+4%), with the latter showing clear signs of recovery in the aftermath of hurricanes Irma and Maria.

UNWTO estimates that tourism in Africa increased by +8% last year, generating approximately 62m international arrivals – a significant improvement compared to 2016. North Africa enjoyed a strong recovery with arrivals up +13%, while arrivals in the Sub-Saharan Africa climbed +5%.

The Middle East received 58m international tourists in 2017, up +5%, with sustained growth in some destinations and a strong recovery in others.

 

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