Macau's flagship carrier Air Macau has announced flight cancellations ahead of China's 1-7 October Golden Week holiday, as local authorities tighten restrictions amid new Covid-19 cases.
The airline will scrap flights from Macau to a number of Chinese cities, including Chengdu, Chongqing, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Nantong, Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin, Yiwu and Qingdao during 1-24 October.
Macau is known for its casinos and is a popular destination for mainland Chinese tourists. But only five out of 25 hotels at major Macau casino complexes surveyed by casino industry data provider GGRAsia were fully booked as of yesterday for at least four nights during the Golden Week holiday period.
Macau authorities announced a total of four new Covid-19 cases on 28 September, all involving security guards working at local hotels used for quarantine purposes, GGRAsia said.
A plan to remove a 14-day quarantine requirement for people entering Zhuhai in southern Guangdong province from Macau starting from 1 October was also scrapped yesterday.
Both Macau and mainland China have adopted a zero-tolerance policy towards Covid-19 and imposed strict restrictions, although infection numbers are low. Macau has a low infection rate with only over 70 confirmed cases so far, data from Johns Hopkins University show.
Travel during the Golden Week holiday this year may not return to pre-pandemic 2019 levels. Residents of Harbin in northeast Heilongjiang province have been told to stay at home and avoid unnecessary travel during the holiday period. Harbin and parts of southeast Fujian province still have high-risk regions, where Covid-19 safety restrictions are tighter.
The Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) said a willingness to travel during the Golden Week holiday this year has increased but is predicting average flights of only around 13,500/d, with an average of 1.33mn/d passengers transported by air. By comparison, flights averaged 16,351/d during the Golden Week holiday of 2019, up by 3.1pc on the year, CAAC data show.
Air travel recovered slightly in September, but refiners' stocks remain high and they are seeking to export as much as their limited export quotas permit. Chinese jet fuel output fell to 710,000 b/d in August, 280,000 b/d below where it was in the first half of the year and its lowest since the country was in lockdown in April 2020.