by Brian Major
Last updated: 4:30 PM ET, Wed June 28, 2023
Access to Belize will expand significantly in November when
JetBlue launches nonstop flights between Belize City’s Philip S.W. Goldson
International Airport and New York’s John F. Kennedy International Airport.
To date, Belize’s 2023 visitor arrivals remain relatively
flat (May’s land-based arrivals totaled 32,871 travelers, a 0.4 percent decline
compared with May 2022). However, the country’s U.S.-based arrivals remain
strong.
Americans accounted for 72.5 percent of Belize’s overnight visitors
in May, according to Belize Tourism Board (BTB) officials. BTB reports 150,206 U.S.
travelers visited the country during the month. Belize is also one of a handful
of Caribbean destinations that attracts both land-based and cruise ship
visitors.
Anthony Mahler, Belize’s minister of tourism and diaspora relations,
took office in 2020 following the decade-plus tenure of his predecessor,
Manuel Heredia. TravelPulse spoke with Mahler recently to learn how his ministry
will support Belize’s future tourism development.
TP: How is the country performing in terms of
visitor arrivals this year?
AM: We're trending around at 91 percent of where we were
2019, maybe a little bit higher than the average.
TP: What brings visitors to Belize?
AM: I don't think there's any other destination in the world that could match what we have to
offer here in such a small [area]. My short statement to [travelers] is ‘Easy
to reach, more than just beach.’
We have been using our culture, the diversity of our people
and all of these things to spread the name Belize and to attract visitors to
our country. We have a diverse product and people.
TP: Where are the travelers coming from?
AM: Our largest market is North America by far. We see over
80 percent of our business coming from the United States and Canada.
TP: How has your administration sought to support
Belize’s tourism growth?
AM: Ever since we got into government two years ago, our
focus has been to attract new airlines to the country [and] new airlift from
certain markets in the United States. We want to ensure we can keep on a growth
path as we move forward.
TP: What improvements are necessary to ensure Belize
can manage visitor growth?
AM: We understand that the dynamics in Belize have to change
a bit. We have 900 hotels with 9,000 rooms. So the average size of a hotel is
10 rooms. That has its charm, but as you move forward and you want to be
competitive on a global standpoint, you need to have a larger room stock and a better
room stock.
And so that has been our approach, to talk to investors and
developers and brands to ensure we have adequate rooms.
TP: Are there new hotel projects in Belize’s future?
AM: So, [we have] the Four Seasons being built, and the Six Senses being built. We're talking to some other
developers who can add high-end rooms across the country. We believe that with
the quality of our destination and the resources we have, there is no other
destination that could compete with us.
TP: Are there plans to improve Belize’s tourism
infrastructure?
AM: We know there are certain infrastructure [elements that
needs to be improved so we're working on that. I recently got an approval to float
a bond [for] some basic infrastructure. The country looking to do another bond [via]
another agency I oversee.
TP: How has the African American market played
into Belize’s tourism growth in recent years?
AM: When I got [into office], I sat down with our marketing
director to tell her we should focus on Atlanta. The Black traveler market is important in that area. They're
highly professional and they want to experience the world.
Two years later, Atlanta is [our] third-leading city. Being
the minister of diaspora relations, it’s a big market for us. [Black Belezians’]
native strings are still attached to Belize.
It’s an easy market for us because there is a decent-sized
population of 400,000 to 750,000 Belizeans living in Atlanta and other places
in the United States.
TP: Belize hosted 1.7 million passengers as recently
as 2019, according to Caribbean Tourism Organization data. How has the segment
performed in 2023?
AM: If you look at the sizes of the ships being built now, the
[largest] ships get the bulk of the visitation. We don't have a docking
facility, so larger ships bypass Belize and go to Roatan and Cancun. As soon as
we get our docking facility here, we'll see the numbers start going up once
again.
TP: There’s a lot of litigation surrounding the
effort to build a port in Belize, correct?
AM: To be honest there’s an all-out
war among [various] entities. There’s all sorts of litigation. There's a
project already halfway done on a small offshore island. [Passengers] will still
have to tender in the short term if they don't build a causeway.
There's another project going on that we believe is a
serious, viable project because you have serious people at the table
[including] Royal Caribbean. So there are serious players at the table and hopefully
all of this mess will be sorted out and we can look these things over and make
the right decisions.
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