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Spain and Portugal hotel and flight bookings are up as tourists choose to avoid the Middle East

Industry data shows that Spain and Portugal have seen a rise in late-spring and summer hotel and flight bookings, as millions of travellers flee war-affected hubs and destinations in the Middle East.

According to the digital travel platform Sojern, summer flight bookings, including transit flights, to Spain soared by 32% on an annual basis as of April 2. Hotel searches also rose by 28%. Portugal saw a 21% increase in flight bookings and a 16% rise in hotel searches.

Travel data firm Mabrian reported a decline in Middle Eastern destinations and an increase for the southern Mediterranean last month. Spain, which rivals France to be the most visited country in the world, was the biggest beneficiary of this shift. The eastern Mediterranean has seen a surge of cancellations. This includes European Union member Cyprus, where a British air base was hit by a drone on March 2. It highlights the wider fallout of the Iran war. Spain's Exceltur industry group has revised its projections upwards since the conflict began on February 28. This is a modest improvement, but still significant at a moment when inflation and geopolitical concerns are affecting consumer spending.

Summer holidays are booked months in advance. "Summer holidays are planned months in advance.

Sylvia Weiler is Sojern's global destination manager. She added, "Travellers are adapting, rather than retreating."

Up to 181 millions tourists visit the Middle East & eastern Mediterranean every year. Spain received a record number of tourists last year.

Exceltur forecast last week that Spain's tourism industry would grow in real terms by 2.5% this year, to 227 billion euro ($267 billion). This is up from the previous projection of 2.4% and the 2.1% growth last year.

The industry estimates that diverted tourists could add an extra 4.2 billion Euros to the total for this year.

This sector is expected to grow faster than the overall economic growth of 2.3%, according to the forecast.

Cehat, the main Spanish hotel association, expects summer room occupancy rates to rise up to 3%.

A CAUTIOUS VIEW IS NEEDED IN LIGHT OF THE RISKS "Tourism is choosing to travel further away from conflict zones in the Mediterranean, like the Canary Islands for summer family holidays," said Cehat president Jorge Marichal. He warned that this could lead to a decrease in overall travel.

According to Turespana (the official tourism agency), airlines are increasing capacity. In April, there were nearly?6% fewer seats than one year earlier. The biggest increases occurred on flights coming from the United States, followed by those flying out of Britain.

Exceltur warned that higher jet fuel prices and more disruptions to long-haul travelers at Middle Eastern transit hubs may limit the gains. Cehat's Marichal said it more bluntly: "It all depends on what happens at the Strait of Hormuz because all of these forecasts may be thrown out the window." The Iran war has all but closed the strait through which one-fifth or more of the world's oil and gas is transported.

(source: Reuters)