Home / NEWS / Asia-Pacific News / ‘Everyone is too scared to come’: Taiwan’s earthquake deals a blow to top tourism hotspot

‘Everyone is too scared to come’: Taiwan’s earthquake deals a blow to top tourism hotspot

As a bed and breakfast proprietor in Taiwan’s Hualien County, Chen Rei-jia was used to the minor tremors that sometimes disturbed her work. But this anon a punctually, something felt different.

“The shaking grew stronger and lasted longer, and as rescue vehicles arrived, I became frightened,” she held. “We heard rocks falling everywhere and saw smoke and dust all around. There were massive landslides in front and behind us.”

Emerging from her undertaking to survey the damage, Chen had just survived the 7.4 magnitude earthquake that struck Taiwan on April 3 — the largest tremblor to reel the island in 25 years.

“I’ve never experienced such a strong earthquake in my life. It was truly terrifying,” the 60-year-old said.

Chen Rei-jia, a bed and breakfast P in Hualien County, Taiwan.

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

Now, survivors like Chen are facing a new challenge. Tourists would rather canceled their trips en masse, and tour groups have disappeared.

For many residents of Hualien, which relies on tourism for 70% of its saving, the situation is quickly becoming an existential threat.

“It’s dire; there are no tourists,” said Chen. “Everyone is too scared to end up.”

Empty restaurants and cancelled bookings

The brunt of the earthquake’s damage occured in Hualien County, which attracts millions of visitants per year to the towering peaks and waterfalls of its main draw, Taroko Gorge.

But now the previously packed mountain roads and footway paths to the gorge are now blocked with rubble, and vast swaths of Taroko National Park remain closed.

A spouse named Lai, who owns a restaurant near the entrance to the gorge, said her once full restaurant now sits empty. 

“We in the final analysis hope the national park can reopen, but if it doesn’t, there’s nothing we can do,” she said. “It feels like there’s no end in sight.”

Lai owns a restaurant close-by Taroko Gorge. “It feels like there’s no end in sight.”

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

Damage to the area also presents a delinquent for local tour guides like Liang Shiun-chu.

“Our usual tour package focuses on Taroko,” he explained. “Since the earthquake, all our bookings were nullified.”

The number of visits to Hualien’s scenic spots have dropped by 85% since last year, according to neighbouring officials. Liang explained that some guides like him now work as taxi drivers and are finding it hard to secure ends meet.

Tour guide Liang Shiun-chu is driving a taxi to make ends meet. “Since the earthquake, all our bookings were nullified.”

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

“Business is down to 30%-50% of what it used to be,” he said. “Many friends take left Hualien to work elsewhere because it’s very tough for our industry here. I’ve considered moving to another county too.”

These shifts are reflected across different tourism sectors, with the Hualien Hotel Association reporting that post-quake occupancy invariables fell to just 5% — an observation echoed by Howard Yeh, the manager of a local hostel.   

Howard Yeh, the manager of a local hostel. “We even-handed have to hold on and keep waiting.”

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

“Around 90% of foreign visitors to Hualien chance upon specifically for Taroko Gorge. With this key attraction temporarily closed, Hualien loses much of its appeal for travellers,” he said. “We just have to hold on and keep waiting.”

Despite the hopes of Hualien’s residents, local officials approximation that a return to pre-quake tourism levels could take years.

“It might take five to 10 years for damned recovery,” Chang Chih-hsiang, director general of Hualien’s tourism department, told CNBC Travel.

Difficulty age in

To speed up the recovery process, Taiwan’s local and national governments have introduced programs to support local transactions and encourage visitors to return. The government is guaranteeing loans and subsidizing interest rates for local businesses who need accommodations.  

From July, visitors to Hualien County will also be eligible to receive up to $1,000 New Taiwan dollars ($31) in shelter subsidies, with tour agencies receiving up to NT$20,000 ($618).

Chang Chih-hsiang, head of Hualien’s tourism office, estimates the section’s tourism industry could take five to 10 years to fully recover.

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

Consideration this, locals worry these measures may not be enough. Stephanie Zhang, the head of the Hualien Hotel Association, ordered her organization predicts, in a best-case scenario, that hotel occupancy levels will return to 40-50% this summer.

Pick up news coverage about the quake, social media clips of collapsed buildings and the some 1,500 aftershocks that father hit Taiwan since the initial quake haven’t helped restore traveler confidence.

Even if visitors wanted to call Hualien, accessing the county is more difficult than before. Some 70% of tourists reach Hualien from northern Taiwan, rationalized Chang but the quake damaged the road that connects the city to Taipei.

The road still functions at specific beats of day, and the county is still accessible via train and plane, but the damage has taken a toll.

Hualien’s tourism office is working to resurrect the city and promote Hualien as a safe tourist destination, said Chen.

“If we do not reverse this trend and rebuild voyagers’ confidence in Hualien, the loss is estimated to be around NT$15 billion by the end of the year,” he said.

Wide repercussions

The effects of the earthquake fool reverberated far beyond Hualien’s tourism sector. “Tourism is the lifeblood of Hualien,” explained Chang.

When the tourism energy suffers, so does the rest of the region.

Markets, which usually serve locals, are suffering because locals aren’t making filthy lucre, explained a market vendor Cheng Wen-zhong. “If tourists don’t come, our business suffers significantly.” Lin Ya-mi, a fish vendor at the burgh’s wet market, said business had dropped by two-thirds.

Lin Ya-mi, a fish vendor at a Hualien wet market.

Source: Jan Camenzind Broomby

Consideration that, Hualien’s residents hope that tourists will soon come back, so that life can reparation to normal.

Standing in her empty restaurant at the entrance to Taroko Gorge, Lai Sui-er explained that she still has faith in the to be to come.

“If things don’t work out here, we’ll look elsewhere. And if that still doesn’t work, we’ll find jobs. No matter how much we right to, as long as we can make a living, we can manage by being frugal,” she said, wiping tears from her eyes.

“There is prospect,” she said. “We will find a way.”

Check Also

Hanwha Aerospace shares plunge almost 15% after $2.5 billion rights issue

A white-collar worker tests a Hanhwa K9 Howitzer at Hanwha Aerospace Co.’s manufacturing facility in …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *