Goa struggling to cope with Russian tourist
influx

Moscow, Oct 30 (RIA Novosti) Russian airlines offering flights
to Goa will have to increase their capacities
dramatically this year to be able to handle the ever-growing tourist traffic.
This fall, 1,400-1,500 Russian visitors are expected to fly to Goa's resorts 
every week, as compared with last year's
average of 800-900.


To meet
the demand, KrasAir's Boeing 757 will take Russian holidaymakers to Goa once 
every ten days and TransAero will schedule three
Boeing 747 flights per week.


The number
of Russians choosing the former Portuguese colony as their holiday destination
during the high season, which in Goa is
between November and March, has now reached 30,000, and is expected to increase
to 50,000 in
2007-2008.


Travel
agents say the popularity of Indian coastal resorts has been growing fast in
recent years. In the late 1990s, trips to Goa were a market niche catered to in
Russia by just a handful of small agencies, says Tatyana Melnichenko, director
for tourism at the Russian Deo Travel group.


It was
not until the turn of the century that group tours became available. Demand for
Goa among Russian tourists has been mounting
steadily since 1999, when the first charter flights to the Indian coast were
launched.


Many
larger companies traditionally specializing in the Mediterranean have now also
set their sights on the Indian subcontinent. Extensive budgets enable such
agencies to arrange trips at lower prices, thereby attracting more customers
than their smaller competitors do.


However,
despite the steep demand and supply curves for Goa,
observers are cautiously optimistic about the resort's further rise, and point
to the shortage of accommodation as the main obstacle.


There are
simply not enough hotels to cope with the current inflow of Russian tourists,
and getting new projects up and running can take quite a while, Melnichenko
says. She believes most of the hotels now appearing in Goa's
resorts have only 10-20 rooms, meaning that their impact on the market
situation will be negligible.


Goa is becoming an increasingly popular destination for
holidaymakers from all over the world. The number of tourists from Europe, as
well as from other parts of India,
grows with every passing year, putting further strain on Goa's
already overstretched infrastructure.


However,
both Russian and Indian companies remain eager to develop tourism in Goa.


'Demand
is increasing rapidly,' says Raj Kumar Goyal, chief executive of the Indian
Cosmo Travels Ltd., which has an office in Russia.


'Russian
tourists are very interested in beaches and few of them are interested in
Indian culture, dances, heritage, or mountains. At the same time, the majority
of Russian tourists who visit, for example, Taj Mahal, take a daytrip there
while on vacation in Goa. Therefore Goa is a perfect place for Russians to 
spend their
holidays.'


 


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