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  • After a painfully slow but gradual opening of the tourist season in July, and the latest restrictions imposed by the main markets – without following the EU criteria – after the most recent COVID-19 outbreaks in Spain, the sales data and cancellations in the first half of August reveal a flattening of the already slow reactivation expected mid-June, pointing to an early closure of the summer season.

  • United Airlines Holdings expects to remove 16,370 jobs next October due to the international drop in travel demand over the COVID-19 crisis, which has caused the airline to cut a number of routes.

  • This week the United Nations Secretary-General launched the Policy Brief “COVID-19 and Transforming Tourism”, which UNWTO assumed the lead role in producing.

  • As UNWTO leads the restart of tourism, the Secretary-General of the United Nations has sent a landmark message to the world, highlighting the sector’s unique role in advancing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and in protecting the most vulnerable members of our societies.

  • Minister of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Ali Asghar Mounesan said that a record number of 8 million tourists visited Iran during the first 10 months of the past Iranian calendar year which ended March 20, 2020 .

  • While many countries such as the USA and Brazil are struggling with devastating corona records and a second wave of the virus is already sweeping across other regions, some islands in the South Pacific, for example, have so far been completely spared by the pandemic. Here is an overview of successes and failures in the fight of the travel world against the coronavirus.

  • The Coronavirus pandemic is having an immense impact on the world as we know it and the tourism industry is one of the sectors most struck by the crisis. EU airlines have been particularly affected and in the last couple of months, many of them have been taking necessary measures to save their business.

  • Tourism, the industry hit hardest by the COVID-19 pandemic, begins to introduce measures for its recovery, just as it did after the 9/11 attacks in New York City that stopped air travel for several weeks and changed security controls forever, or during the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake and tsunami. The truth is that there is no going back to normal. It is a fact that, at first, some changes will be quite drastic, but companies and businesses will have to get used to it until everything starts flowing again and, hopefully, in a better way. Travel after COVID-19 will bring the following changes.

  • The temporary rental platform has always struggled with the way the hosts decide how and when they clean their houses. Therefore, Airbnb now opted to establish a hygienic protocol and even a certification to secure clean accommodation.

  • The Madeira Autonomous Region Promotion Association (APM) has launched a certification of good practices to manage biological risks. The novelty, the health security certificate, will be available to member companies and the aim is to strengthen the travelers' confidence. The idea is part of the mission to strengthen health security, for tourism to grow again after the pandemic.