The scramble to Siem Reap

Aug 21st at 14:17
21-08-2013 14:17:42+07:00

The scramble to Siem Reap

As Cambodia’s busy tourism season approaches, domestic and regional airlines are scrambling to offer Siem Reap routes in a bid to capitalise on the growing number of visitors to the Angkor Wat gateway.

 

The expansion means travellers in the region will have a wider variety of choices, and as competition tightens when the influx occurs around November, potentially lower prices.

In the past several months, players have entered the fray at a consistent rate. The latest, Korean carrier Air Busan, a subsidiary of Asiana Airlines, plans for scheduled daily flights between Busan, South Korea’s second-largest city, and Siem Reap, according to Vann Chanty, director of the Air Transport Department of Cambodia’s State Secretariat of Civil Aviation.

“Now they are in the process to apply for what we call the landing permit,” he said, adding that it takes around two months to be issued.

Chanty said Chinese carrier Juneyao Airlines has also sent its application for a landing permit, targeting non-stop scheduled flights between Shanghai and Siem Reap. The private airline will be joined by Chinese flag carrier Air China, which envisions adding direct flights from Beijing as early as November.

The list continues with Dragonair, a Hong Kong-based subsidiary of Cathay Pacific, which announced last month it will start direct routes between Hong Kong and Siem Reap on October 29, offering the seasonal service three times a week.

Airlines that aren’t adding the routes are in expansion mode. Singapore-based Silk Air, already operating a daunting 10 Singapore-Siem Reap legs weekly, wants to introduce an 11th into the mix, according to its website.

Ang Kim Eang, president of the Cambodia Association of Travel Agents, said the number of carriers planning to launch flights to Siem Reap is particular high this year.

He said the session for the UNESCO World Heritage Committee, hosted this year in Phnom Penh, and the fact that Cambodia held the chairmanship for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations last year, played a role in attracting “the world to fly to Siem Reap”.

The increase follows a rising number of tourists visiting the city, home to the 12th-century Angkor Wat ruin. According to Norinda Khek, a spokesman for Cambodia Airports, the company managing airports in Phnom Penh, Siem Reap and Sihanoukville, 1.5 million passengers landed in Siem Reap between January and July this year, a 22.5 per cent year-on-year increase.

In July alone, 169,400 passengers touched ground in Siem Reap, an 18 per cent increase compared with the same month last year.

According to Lav Heng, general manager of VLK Royal Tourism Co Ltd, more airlines flying to Siem Reap means more competition, and that could lower fares. The downside is that, as tourism industry officials have argued, the concentration on Siem Reap detracts from Cambodia’s lesser-known holiday sites in the northeastern provinces, coastal areas and the vicinity around Siem Reap.

“They just come to see the temple, that’s all,” Heng said.

“We cannot keep guests.… They just come to stay one night or two nights, then go back. That is not so good for us.”

Heng also said the increase in flights to Siem Reap does not come alongside a growth in accommodation options in the popular town, and during peak season there are not enough rooms.

“Even if we have more flights and the flights are very cheap, the occupancy is a problem,” he said.

One future entry has attracted particular notice.

On October 1, budget carrier Thai AirAsia will fly between Bangkok and Siem Reap at round-trip fares of about $110. Bangkok Airways charges roughly $315 for the flight, which lasts about an hour each way. The looming competition has sparked talk of a price war.

The regional airlines are joined by local chartered carrier Wat Phnom Airlines, which had its maiden flight from Siem Reap to Taipei last month. National carrier Cambodia Angkor Air announced earlier this year that it would take off between Phnom Penh and Siem Reap five times a day starting in July.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Kampot’s famous pepper goes global

When Him Anna started to plant pepper crops seven years ago, she would have never thought that one day it would turn into a profitable business.

Cambodia near top of list for expat workers

Cambodia is one of the most attractive countries for expatriates working for US companies in ASEAN, according to a survey of 475 US business executives from...

Malaysian IT firm eyes Cambodia

Struck by revenue declines, Malaysia-based IT company Dataprep Holdings Bhd (DHB) is looking at overseas markets that could include Cambodia, according to the...

Microsoft decries pirated software

Microsoft Cambodia has found that an overwhelming majority of computer retailers surveyed earlier this year failed to offer customers the option to purchase...

Number working abroad drops

The number of Cambodian labourers legally working abroad dropped 30 per cent, from nearly 17,000 in the first six months of 2012 to about 12,000 for the first half...

Confirel goes local with palm juice

More than a decade ago, when Hay Ly Eang started working on his long-term idea of processing palm juice, people told him he was crazy. Palm juice, they said, is not...

Factory production sluggish

In the wake of last month’s election, production levels at Cambodian garment factories are still below the norm as lingering fears of political unrest keep workers...

Gaming outfit reports loss

Entertainment Gaming Asia Inc (EGA), a NASDAQ-listed company that supplies NagaWorld Casino with slot machines and operates casinos in Poipet town and Pailin...

Growth at risk from ‘turmoil’

Cambodia's Minister of Commerce and long-time ruling party stalwart Cham Prasidh said yesterday that post-election demonstrations could prevent growth and even...

Global hotel group sees profits rise 20 per cent

Intercontinental Hotels Group, one of the world’s leading hotel companies and operator of InterContinental Hotels & Resorts – one of whose hotels is located in...


MOST READ


Back To Top