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Air travel bubble: Some Singapore-Hong Kong first flights sold out, air tickets hit $1,000

Air travel bubble: Some Singapore-Hong Kong first flights sold out, air tickets hit $1,000
Travellers will need to take and pay for two to three Covid-19 tests depending on the duration of their stay.
PHOTO: The Straits Times

SYDNEY - The opening of Asia's first "travel bubble" allowing tourism without quarantines since the coronavirus pandemic hit has sparked a surge in searches and bookings for travel between Singapore and Hong Kong, stirring hopes the model could be rolled out more broadly.

Some of the first flights between the two cities, starting on Nov 22 on Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific Airways, have already sold out, amid a quota of 200 daily travellers that will rise to 400 on Dec 7.

In the three hours after details were released on Wednesday (Nov 11), flight searches for Hong Kong to Singapore grew by 300 per cent, followed by a 200 per cent increase in Singapore hotel searches, according to Trip.com data.

"I think in the short term, people who want to travel are, like, shaking in their pants right now to sign up to travel," said Mr Jameson Wong, APAC director of travel data firm ForwardKeys. "Christmas has been popular (for bookings), as offices will be closed."

Airfares between the cities have risen by about HK$1,000 (S$174), or 35 per cent, since the travel bubble was announced last month, Daiwa analyst Kelvin Lau said in a note to clients.

One-way Singapore-Hong Kong tickets range from $618 to $1,028 on Singapore Airlines in December, according to a check of its website on Thursday.

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Travellers will need to take and pay for two to three Covid-19 tests, depending on the duration of their stay, in an agreement that Mr Lau said could be a model for a broader reopening of travel within Asia.

International passenger traffic fell by 96.4 per cent in September compared with last year at airlines in the region, according to the Association of Asia Pacific Airlines. Singapore Airlines and Cathay Pacific have been among the hardest hit because they lack domestic aviation markets, and both carriers have cut thousands of jobs.

Mr Conrad Clifford, International Air Transport Association Regional vice-president for Asia Pacific, said the bubble, although small, was a step in the right direction to reboot international travel.

"We look forward to seeing Hong Kong and Singapore expand this arrangement with other destinations, and for other governments to adopt a similar approach," he said in a statement.

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