French Hotels Count Cost Of Paris Attacks

January 19, 2016

The deadly attacks in Paris in November have cost French hoteliers an estimated EUR€270 million in lost revenue and could continue to have an impact on hotel occupancy rates.

Hospitality research firm MKG said the sector was still suffering in January but there was some prospect of a recovery from mid-February, provided there are no more incidents.

Improving economic conditions, the Euro 2016 football tournament to be held in France in June, and trade fairs, should help hotel room demand this year, it added.

The French capital has been on high alert since 130 people were killed in shootings and suicide bombings in Paris on November 13.

"We estimate the revenue shortfall for the French hotel industry at EUR€270 million, of which EUR€146 million was for Paris alone," Vanguelis Panayotis, director of development at MKG told reporters.

MKG's estimate is for the November 2015 to March 2016 period.

The attacks have sent shudders through the tourism industry in one of the world's most visited cities, with hotel owners, tour operators and others in the industry hoping the expected drop-off in visitors will not last long.

In December the chief executive of AccorHotels said that Europe's largest hotel group had felt a "real economic impact" from the attacks, with fewer last-minute bookings for the second half of December compared with a year ago and that the effect will probably last three or four months.

France, which has been struggling to revive its economy, is the most-visited country in the world, with Paris hosting 32.2 million visitors last year.

Overall French hotel occupancy rates fell by 0.3 percentage points in France to 65.4 percent in 2015 while RevPAR (revenue per available room) rose 0.1 percent. In Paris alone occupancy rates fell by 3.4 percentage points and RevPAR 3.7 pct in 2015, MKG data also showed.

(Reuters)