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FOREWORD Belize Travel and Tourism Statistics is an annual compilation of statistics on the Tourism Industry in Belize. The Belize Tourism Board (BTB) wishes to thank the following organizations for providing us annually with the data which makes this publication possible: Institute of Archaeology Belize Audubon Society Central Bank of Belize Department of Immigration & Nationality Hol Chan Marine Reserve The Belize Zoo and Tropical Education Center The Community Baboon Sanctuary National Institute of Culture & History Forestry Department Information has also been sourced from International bodies such as: Caribbean Tourism Organization United Nations World Tourism Organization World Travel and Tourism Council Sistema de Integración Centroamericana This publication includes overnight visitor arrival figures and cruise passenger arrivals for Belize and the Caribbean. This publication also includes tourist arrival and day-tripper data for the Central American region. A detailed market breakdown of visitors to Belize is also featured. The performance of the hotel sector can be found in Section 2. Section 3 is devoted to visits to selected sites countrywide. All recommendations, comments, and inquiries regarding the contents of this publication should be forwarded to: Raymond James Mossiah Product Development Department Belize Tourism Board P.O. Box 325 64 Regent & South Streets Belize City, Belize Phone: + 501-227-2420 Fax: + 501-227-2423 Website: www.travelbelize.org e-mail: btbb@btl.net

TRAVEL AND TOURISM STATISTICS 2008 CONTENTS SECTION 1: ARRIVAL STATISTICS SUMMARY Table 1.1 International Tourist Arrivals by Sub-region Table 1.2 Overnight Visitors by Category Table 1.3 Tourist Visitors by Port of Entry Table 1.4 Tourist Arrivals at the Philip Goldson International Airport by Month Table 1.5 Tourist Arrivals at the Philip Goldson International Airport by Quarter Table 1.6 Tourist Arrivals at the Philip Goldson International Airport by Season Table 1.7 Tourist Visitors to selected Caribbean Destinations Table 1.8 Market Breakdown Tourist Visitors to selected Caribbean Destinations Table 1.9 Tourist Arrivals to Central America Table 1.10 Day Trippers to Central America Table 1.11 Total Visitors to Central America Table 1.12 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Table 1.13 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Origin Table 1.14 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Market Share Table 1.15 European Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Origin Table 1.16 European Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Table 1.17 American Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Table 1.18 Canadian Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Table 1.19 Latin American Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Table 1.20 Cruise Arrivals by Month Table 1.21 Cruise Arrivals by Quarter Table 1.22 Cruise Arrivals by Major Cruise Lines Table 1.23 Cruise Passenger Arrivals to selected Caribbean Destinations Table 1.24 Tourist Expenditure Table 1.25 Selected Central American Indicators SECTION 2: HOTEL STATISTICS SUMMARY Table 2.1 Number of Hotels (also Figure 2.1) Table 2.2 Number of Rooms (also Figure 2.2) Table 2.2a. Hotel Size Distribution (also Figure 2.3) Table 2.3 Number of Beds (also Figure 2.4) Table 2.4 Hotel Performance by Region Table 2.5a Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2003

Table 2.5b Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2004 Table 2.5c Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2005 Table 2.5d Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2006 Table 2.5e Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2007 Table 2.5f Monthly Occupancy Rates by Area, 2008 Table 2.6 Monthly Occupancy Rates (also Figure 2.5) Table 2.7 Average Room Rates by Area (also Figure 2.6) Table 2.8 Average Room Rates by Month (also Figure 2.7) Table 2.9 Room Revenue Distribution (%) by Area (also Figure 2.8) Table 2.10 Room Revenue Distribution (%) by Month (also Figure 2.9) Table 2.11 Employment in the Hotel Industry (also Figure 2.10) Table 2.12 Employment by Nationality Table 2.13 Hotel Employment by Area (also Figure 2.11) Table 2.14 Tour Guides & Tour Operators by Area (also Figure 2.12 & Figure 2.13) SECTION 3: VISITATION STATISTICS TO SELECTED ATTRACTIONS SUMMARY Table 3.1 Visitors to Maya Sites (also Figure 3.3) Table 3.2 Monthly Visitors to Maya Sites (also Figure 3.4) Table 3.3 Visitors to Hol Chan Marine Reserve (also Figure 3.5) Table 3.4 Monthly Visitors to Hol Chan Marine Reserve (also Figure 3.6) Table 3.5 Types of Visitors to the Belize Zoo (also Figure 3.7) Table 3.6 Monthly Visitors to the Belize Zoo (also Figure 3.8) Table 3.7 Visitors to BAS Managed Protected Areas (also Figure 3.10) Table 3.8 Types of Visitors to BAS Managed Protected Areas (also Figure 3.11) Table 3.9 Monthly Visitors to BAS Managed Protected Areas (also Figure 3.12) Table 3.10 Monthly Visitors to the Mountain Pine Ridge Reserve (also Figure 3.13) Table 3.11 Types of Visitors to the Community Baboon Sanctuary (also Figure 3.14) Table 3.12 Monthly Visitors to the Community Baboon Sanctuary

SECTION 1. ARRIVAL STATISTICS

Immigration Statistics Tourist Arrivals The illustration below shows that arrivals fall into tourist (shaded areas) and non-tourist categories. In 2008 Belize welcomed 842,396 visitors, of which 245,026 were overnight tourists and 597,370 were cruise visitors spending only a few hours in the country. Figure 1.1 Arrivals into Belize by Major Categories and Subgroups ARRIVALS INTO BELIZE TOTAL ARRIVALS INTERNATIONAL ARRIVALS BELIZEANS RETURNING RESIDENTS Temporary Employment Permit Student Permit Living Abroad (In-boundTourists) Living in Belize (Non In-bound Tourists) Holders of Resident Cards Foreigners living in Belize for 1-5 years Diplomatic Organizational Married to Belizeans Children with Belizean Parents Dependent Permit Intransit Official (In-bound Toursits) Tourist (see page 2) Business (In-bound Tourists) The Immigration Department categorizes arrivals as shown below. Included in Total Arrivals are Tourists and Non-Tourists. Leisure, Recreation and holidays Business and Professional Religion / Pilgrimages Visiting Friends and Relatives Health Treatment Other (Aircraft & Ships crews on public transportation) Shaded areas indicate tourist visitors Purpose of visit RR Returning Residents TV Tourist Visitors (leisure/vacation) BV Business Visitors (private sector business) INT Intransit Visitors OV Official Visitors (government business) TEP Temporary Employment Permits (persons with) SP Student Permit (persons with) DP Dependent Permits (persons with) DIP Diplomats ORG Organizational (non-nationals residing in Belize)

International Tourist Arrivals According to the World Tourism Organization: 2008 will clearly go into the history books as a year of turbulence and contrasts. In the 12 months since UNWTO published its January 2008 edition of the World Tourism Barometer, including forecasts for the year ahead, the growth in international tourist arrivals has slowed drastically worldwide, under the influence of an extremely volatile and unfavorable global economy due to factors such as the credit crunch, the widening financial crisis, commodity and oil price rises, and massive exchange rate fluctuations. All this has, inevitably, undermined both business and consumer confidence, contributing in turn to the current global recession. 1 Table 1.1 International Tourist Arrivals by Sub-region Figure 1.2 World Inbound International Tourist Arrivals, 2008* Figure 1.3 World Inbound International Tourist Arrivals (millions) 1 UNWTO World Tourism Barometer, p.1 Vol. 7 No. 1 January 2009 www.world-tourism.org/facts/menu.html

In 2008 the global travel industry was hit by a number of economic hurricanes. On the international front, arrivals continued to grow in the first half of the year. However in Belize, the signs of trouble were evident since April and Belize ended the year down by 2.5%. Belize experienced decreases in both the leisure category as well as business category. The table below shows that in 2008 approximately 96% of overnight tourists came for leisure while the remaining 4% visited for business. Table 1.2 Overnight Visitors by Category Category 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Leisure 186,883 185,705 186,097 207,930 218,506 224,772 234,625 237,892 234,929 Business 8,883 10,250 13,424 10,063 10,828 10,426 11,281 10,891 8,822 Total 195,766 195,955 199,521 220,574 230,832 236,573 247,309 251,422 245,026 P = Provisional R = Revised Entry Points The Philip Goldson International Airport (PGIA) remains the main port of entry for tourist arrivals to Belize. Since 2004 tourist visitors through this point have accounted for more than 70% of overnight visitors to Belize. In 2008 this was no different as the PGIA represented roughly 73% of tourists. International carriers into Belize include US Airways from Charlotte, North Carolina (USA); American Airlines from Dallas, Texas and Miami, Florida; Continental Airlines from Houston, Texas; and Grupo Taca which remains constant from San Salvador, El Salvador and also from Houston. Delta Airlines arrives from Atlanta, Georgia and there are a few charters and private flights that come in every year into Belize. Table 1.3 Tourists Visitors by Port of Entry Port 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006P 2007R 2008P PGIA 131,683 133,775 129,675 151,978 162,675 174,636 178,552 182,904 178,379 SLA 27,258 26,555 25,276 21,893 21,985 20,843 21,540 22,555 23,783 BWBS 27,503 26,912 36,369 38,261 38,034 33,253 38,667 36,261 33,323 SCK 901 773 916 1,287 1,225 734 816 740 1,017 PGA 8,420 7,940 7,285 7,155 6,914 7,107 7,734 8,962 8,524 Total 195,766 195,955 199,521 220,574 230,832 236,573 247,309 251,422 245,026 PGIA Philip Goldson International Airport SCK Stann Creek (Southern) Seaport SLA Santa Elena (Northern) Border Station with Mexico PGA Punta Gorda (Southern) Seaport BWBS Belize Western Border (Benque) Station with Guatemala

Figure 1.4 2008 Tourist Visitors by Port of Entry The four record setting months at the PGIA were not able to offset the months in which decreases were reported. That led to an overall decrease in the number of arrivals at the PGIA. In analyzing the market breakdown through the PGIA it can be said that the decrease in American visitors for the most part accounted for the decrease at the PGIA. Of note is that this is the primary port of entry for American visitors as it is approximately 2 hours from Dallas, Houston and Miami while Charlotte and Atlanta are 2.5 and 4 hours away respectively. Table 1.4 Total Tourists Arrivals at Philip Goldson International Airport (PGIA) by month % Change Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P vs. 2007 Jan 11,071 12,334 11,057 13,158 14,630 16,156 16,144 15,358 16,293 6.1 Feb 13,326 13,460 13,020 14,708 17,409 18,848 18,728 18,708 19,791 5.8 Mar 17,427 16,222 16,347 19,061 19,917 23,394 22,852 25,195 24,683-2.0 Apr 12,743 12,782 10,472 14,183 14,635 15,330 18,262 17,565 15,643-10.9 May 10,965 11,832 11,154 13,085 12,804 13,138 14,933 15,349 15,519 1.1 Jun 11,706 12,526 11,952 13,594 14,107 15,949 16,703 17,141 17,307 1.0 Jul 12,177 12,830 11,309 13,779 15,038 15,679 16,007 15,968 15,659-1.9 Aug 10,182 11,266 9,995 12,001 11,665 11,471 11,567 12,249 12,223-0.2 Sep 6,447 5,027 5,045 5,608 6,370 6,189 6,069 6,289 5,338-15.1 Oct 4,658 5,494 5,740 6,888 7,633 7,749 7,149 8,268 6,954-15.9 Nov 8,447 8,433 9,847 10,838 11,615 12,064 12,203 12,334 12,193-1.1 Dec 12,533 11,568 13,736 15,075 16,852 18,671 17,951 18,491 16,777-9.3 TOTAL 131,683 133,774 129,675 151,978 162,675 174,636 178,568 182,915 178,379-2.5

Figure 1.5 Tourist Arrivals at PGIA by Month Table 1.5 Tourists Arrivals by Quarter at the PGIA 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P % Change vs. 2007 1st Quarter 41,825 42,016 40,425 46,928 51,956 58,397 57,724 59,261 60,767 2.5 2nd Quarter 35,415 37,141 33,578 40,862 41,545 44,417 49,898 50,056 48,468-3.2 3rd Quarter 28,806 29,124 26,349 31,388 33,074 33,339 33,643 34,506 33,220-3.7 4th Quarter 25,638 25,495 29,323 32,801 36,100 38,484 37,287 39,093 35,924-8.1 TOTAL 131,683 133,775 129,675 151,978 162,675 174,636 178,552 182,915 178,379-2.5 Table 1.6 Tourists Arrivals by Season at the PGIA 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P % Change vs. 2007 Winter 54,568 54,798 50,897 61,111 66,591 73,727 75,985 76,826 76,410-0.5 Summer 77,115 78,976 78,777 90,868 96,084 100,910 102,583 106,089 101,970-3.9 TOTAL 131,683 133,774 129,675 151,978 162,675 174,636 178,568 182,915 178,379-2.5 Winter refers to January-April Summer refers to May-December

Table 1.7 Tourist Arrivals in Selected Caribbean Destinations 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2008 2007- Destination Change Anguilla 47,965 43,798 46,915 53,987 62,084 72,962 77,652 68,282-12.1 Antigua & Barbuda * 193,176 198,085 224,030 245,797 245,384 253,669 261,786 265,841 1.5 Aruba 691,420 642,627 641,906 728,157 732,514 694,372 772,073 622,675 N/A Bahamas 1,428,209 1,402,894 1,428,973 1,450,043 1,514,532 1,600,751 1,527,622 1,462,404-4.3 Barbados P 507,086 497,899 531,211 551,502 547,534 562,558 574,576 567,667-1.2 Belize P 195,955 199,521 220,574 230,832 236,573 247,309 251,422 245,026-2.5 Bermuda * 274,983 283,967 256,563 271,607 269,576 298,973 305,548 263,613-13.7 Bonaire 50,395 52,086 62,179 62,507 62,550 63,552 74,309 62,101 N/A British Virgin Islands P 295,625 284,656 278,114 304,518 337,135 356,271 358,056 345,934-3.4 Cancun (Mexico) ** 2,178,715 1,965,445 2,076,478 2,331,362 2,134,180 1,586,942 2,022,302 2,165,320 7.1 Cayman Islands 334,071 302,797 293,515 259,929 167,801 267,257 291,503 302,879 3.9 Cozumel (Mexico)** 240,499 226,031 304,233 368,589 276,515 265,680 57,075 N/A N/A Cuba 1,774,541 1,685,231 1,907,320 1,854,410 2,319,334 2,220,567 2,152,221 2,348,340 9.1 Curacao 204,603 217,963 221,390 223,439 222,070 234,383 299,782 266,164 N/A Dominica 66,393 67,108 72,948 79,386 79,257 83,916 54,606 N/A N/A Dominican Republic* 2,868,915 2,793,581 3,268,182 3,443,205 3,690,692 3,965,055 3,979,582 3,979,672 0.0 Grenada P 123,351 132,416 142,355 133,865 98,244 118,490 129,118 123,770-4.1 Guyana 95,148 104,341 100,911 121,989 116,596 113,474 131,487 38,590-70.7 Jamaica 1,276,516 1,266,366 1,350,285 1,414,786 1,478,663 1,678,905 1,700,785 1,767,271 N/A Martinique P 460,383 447,891 453,160 470,891 484,127 503,214 503,107 479,933-4.6 Montserrat 9,800 9,623 8,375 10,138 9,690 7,963 7,745 7,360-5.0 Puerto Rico ** 1,218,712 1,279,762 1,321,846 1,411,910 1,465,292 1,446,184 1,361,083 1,323,795-2.7 Saba 9,005 10,778 10,260 11,012 11,462 11,012 11,673 12,043 3.2 St Eustatius 9,597 9,781 10,788 11,056 10,355 9,585 11,568 7,146 N/A St Kitts & Nevis 25,493 25,201 17,699 35,390 27,869 N/A N/A N/A N/A St Lucia 250,132 253,463 276,948 298,431 317,939 302,510 287,435 295,761 2.9 St Maarten * 402,649 380,800 427,587 475,031 467,861 467,804 469,407 475,410 1.3 St Vincent & Grenadines 70,686 77,622 78,535 86,727 95,505 97,432 89,637 60,156-32.9 Trinidad & Tobago 383,101 384,212 409,069 442,555 460,195 457,387 449,452 267,317-40.5 Turks & Caicos 165,836 154,961 164,100 173,081 200,000 N/A N/A N/A N/A US Virgin Islands 609,646 597,958 618,703 658,638 697,033 671,362 693,372 678,904-2.1 Data contained reflects January to December for the respective years. For 2008: St. Eustatius to July only, Aruba and Curacao to September only and Bonaire to October only. For 2007: Cozumel to February only and Dominica to August only. Please note there have been revisions to data from various countries as far back as 2006. The information reflected here is based on the most recent information from the Caribbean Tourism Organization (as of April 2, 2009). * Non-Resident Air Arrivals **Non-Resident Hotel registrations only P Preliminary R Revised SOURCE: Caribbean Tourism Organization http://www.onecaribbean.org

Table 1.8 Market Breakdown of Tourist Arrivals in Selected Caribbean Destinations Time United 2007-2007- 2007-2007- Destination Anguilla Antigua & Barbuda * Aruba Bahamas Barbados P Belize P Bermuda * Bonaire Cancun (Mexico) ** Cayman Islands Cuba 1 Curacao Dom Republic * Grenada P Guyana Jamaica Montserrat Puerto Rico ** Saba St. Lucia St. Eustatius St. Maarten * St. Vincent & Grenadines Suriname Trinidad & Tobago U S Virgin Is.** Frame States 2008 Canada 2008 Europe 2008 Other 2008 Tourists % Change Tourists % Change Tourists % Change Tourists % Change Jan- Dec 40,202-12.6 2,074-13.36 8,962-17.0 17,044-7.8 Jan- Dec 84,032 6.8 13,189 25.7 110,265-4.5 58,355 2.1 Jan- Sep 418,873 7.0 24,397 37.3 53,542 9.1 125,863 19.6 Jan- Dec 1,176,683-6.9 114,947 14.6 93,799 7.6 76,975 0.6 Jan- Dec 131,795-1.6 57,335 8.2 251,778 0.4 126,759-6.6 Jan- Dec 147,655-3.2 17,693 6.2 34,265 0.3 45,414-5.9 Jan- Dec 189,388-17.5 27,207-2.3 35,003-2.6 12,015-2.1 Jan- Oct 26,763 2.0 1,671 25.3 25,630-0.3 8,037 8.2 Jan- Dec 1,679,848 6.9 130,509 11.5 213,077 1.8 141,886 14.3 Jan- Dec 240,462 3.7 18,544 6.9 21,271 5.0 22,602 2.7 Jan- Dec - - 818,246 23.9 909,086-1.6 621,008 9.4 Jan- Sep 35,019-0.9 5,208 11.3 98,795 11.4 127,142 70.3 Jan- Dec 1,092,240 1.1 635,933 8.3 1,345,290-3.0 906,209-2.0 Jan- Dec 21,479-20.8 6,211 3.2 43,047 3.0 53,033-2.1 Jan- May 18,181-30.9 6,911-16.3 3,120-26.4 10,378-21.6 Jan- Dec 1,150,942 1.6 236,193 23.9 284,700-1.5 95,436 7.6 Jan- Dec 1,922-8.9 395 1.8 2,333-1.4 2,710-6.0 Jan- Dec -1.1 15,878-5.2 28,674-19.7 90,319-11.7 Jan- Dec 4,456-0.2 757 1.7 5,605 6.0 1,225 4.2 Jan- Dec 108,596-4.3 26,279 41.0 96,871 9.1 64,015-3.8 Jan- July 1,663-3.8 165 5.1 3,754 9.2 1,564 1.0 Jan- Dec 257,912 1.6 34,055 5.3 102,713 6.6 80,730-7.1 Jan- Aug 17,763-12.9 4,838 0.2 15,868-9.5 21,687-8.6 Jan- Feb 655 13.3 166-8.8 16,313-2.9 6,316-3.8 Jan- July 115,925 6.3 33,998 13.3 40,518-18.6 76,876 1.6 Jan- Dec 672,870 9.9 8,922 48.3 15,679 5.3 34,029-26.7 * Non-Resident Air Arrivals **Non-Resident Hotel registrations only SOURCE: Caribbean Tourism Organization http://www.onecaribbean.org P Preliminary R Revised

Table 1.9 Tourist Arrivals to Central America (in 000s) Country 2002 2003 2004R 2005R 2006R 2007R 2008P 2007-2008 % Change Belize 199.5 220.6 230.8 236.6 247.3 251.4 245.0-2.5 Costa Rica 1,113.4 1,238.7 1,437.1 1,679.1 1,725.3 1,979.9 2,080.0 5.1 El Salvador 950.6 857.4 811.5 969.3 1,138.4 1,338.5 1,384.8 3.5 Guatemala 884.2 880.2 1,156.3 1,298.6 1,454.6 1,448.5 1,527.0 5.4 Honduras 549.5 610.5 641.0 673.0 738.7 831.4 899.3 8.2 Nicaragua 471.6 525.8 614.8 712.4 749.2 800.0 857.9 7.2 Panama 533.5 566.0 621.3 702.1 843.3 1,103.0 1,225.0 11.1 P = Preliminary R = Revised Table 1.10 Day Trippers to Central America (in 000s) Country 2002 2003 2004R 2005R 2006R 2007R 2008P 2007-2008 % Change Belize 319.7 575.2 851.3 800.3 655.9 624.1 597.4-4.3 Costa Rica 222.5 275.6 318.1 280.0 345.6 321.8 311.2-3.3 El Salvador 86.5 78.0 78.5 179.0 222.4 381.3 490.2 28.6 Guatemala 6.4 19.3 25.2 17.0 47.5 179.0 188.4 5.3 Honduras 238.6 276.1 384.5 444.6 397.7 505.2 692.5 37.1 Nicaragua 2.1 5.7 120.2 91.5 141.7 178.3 260.2 45.9 Panama 266.7 331.1 383.0 368.0 371.0 325.4 385.0 18.3 For Belize the information refers to cruise visitors only. P = Preliminary R = Revised Table 1.11 Total Visitors to Central America (in 000s) Country 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006P 2007R 2008P 2007-2008 % Change Belize 519.2 795.8 1,082.2 1,036.9 903.2 875.6 842.4-3.8 Costa Rica 1,335.9 1,514.3 1,755.2 1,959.1 2,070.9 2,301.7 2,391.2 3.9 El Salvador 1,037.1 935.4 890.0 1,148.3 1,360.8 1,719.8 1,875.0 9.0 Guatemala 890.6 899.5 1,181.5 1,315.6 1,502.1 1,627.5 1,715.4 5.4 Honduras 788.1 886.6 1,025.5 1,117.6 1,136.4 1,336.6 1,591.8 19.1 Nicaragua 473.7 531.4 735.0 803.9 890.9 978.3 1,118.1 14.3 Panama 800.2 897.0 1,004.3 1,070.1 1,214.3 1,428.4 1,610.0 12.7 P = Preliminary R = Revised SOURCE: Sistema de Integración Centroamericana (SICA) http://www.sica.int/

Table 1.12 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 January 17,033 18,896 17,820 19,648 22,166 22,165 22,264 21,534 23,130 7.4 February 18,767 19,767 19,377 20,412 23,645 24,734 24,278 25,618 25,803 0.7 March 22,921 21,526 23,388 24,460 26,817 29,321 29,415 31,267 30,818-1.4 April 18,699 18,398 17,027 19,660 20,320 20,503 23,888 23,595 21,361-9.5 May 15,704 16,335 16,106 17,967 17,386 17,999 19,898 19,938 20,209 1.4 June 16,148 17,081 16,953 19,228 18,939 20,460 21,572 22,409 22,261-0.7 July 18,307 18,704 18,011 20,670 21,734 20,062 22,024 22,710 22,146-2.5 August 16,633 17,342 16,184 19,689 17,479 18,335 18,498 18,112 18,655 3.0 September 11,019 8,659 8,634 9,975 10,432 10,013 11,626 11,079 8,957-19.2 October 8,580 9,069 10,397 11,524 12,167 12,011 10,883 12,292 11,129-9.5 November 13,632 12,822 15,603 16,313 16,873 16,711 18,079 18,911 17,170-9.2 December 18,324 17,357 20,021 21,028 22,873 24,259 24,883 23,958 23,388-2.4 Total 195,766 195,955 199,521 220,574 230,832 236,573 247,309 251,422 245,026-2.5 Table 1.13 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Origin Area 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 American 104,717 106,293 104,603 127,288 137,367 145,977 151,510 152,569 147,654-3.2 Canadian 9,205 9,492 9,185 9,831 11,926 13,580 15,553 16,655 17,695 6.2 European 27,674 29,735 29,115 33,528 32,767 33,466 34,373 34,175 34,269 0.3 Latin America 34,485 31,437 38,592 35,610 33,751 28,658 29,932 29,860 27,989-6.3 Belizeans living abroad 14,106 12,999 11,896 7,799 7,698 7,705 8,365 9,160 8,779-4.2 Caribbean 1,696 1,760 1,941 2,056 2,209 2,087 2,319 2,595 2,307-11.1 Asia 2,097 2,402 2,235 2,412 2,729 2,469 2,367 3,280 2,774-15.4 Oceania 1,129 1,122 1,176 1,342 1,556 1,915 2,149 2,202 2,460 11.8 Middle East 361 445 405 369 481 369 381 435 588 35.1 Africa 296 271 374 338 349 348 359 491 512 4.3 TOTAL 195,766 195,955 199,521 220,574 230,832 236,573 247,309 251,422 245,026-2.5 Latin America includes Mexico, Central America and South America

The Canadian market shows great potential as it has almost doubled since the year 2000. In the period 2007 to 2008 there was an increase of 6.2%. This was noteworthy since there are no direct flights from any Canadian province to Belize. Meanwhile arrivals from Europe flat-lined around 34,000 and have not reflected any significant growth in the last five years. However, there has been significant growth since 2000. The American market represents just over 60% of all international overnight arrivals into Belize. Due to the economic downturn in the US, many Americans did not travel, decided on destinations closer to the United States, or opted for travel within the borders of the US. In times of economic uncertainty, travel becomes a luxury that is foregone for more immediate needs, and this indeed was the case in 2008 for many Americans. Table 1.14 Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Market Share Area 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P American 53.5 54.2 52.4 57.7 59.5 61.7 61.3 60.7 60.3 Canadian 4.7 4.8 4.6 4.5 5.2 5.7 6.3 6.6 7.2 European 14.1 15.2 14.6 15.2 14.2 14.1 13.9 13.6 14.0 Latin America 17.6 16.0 19.3 16.1 14.6 12.1 12.1 11.9 11.4 Belizeans living abroad 7.2 6.6 6.0 3.5 3.3 3.3 3.4 3.6 3.6 Caribbean 0.9 0.9 1.0 0.9 1.0 0.9 0.9 1.0 0.9 Asia 1.1 1.2 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.0 1.0 1.3 1.1 Oceania 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 0.9 1.0 Middle East 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.2 Africa 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.2 TOTAL 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 The Airline Development Committee established in 2008 is mandated to seek new carriers and routes into Belize, including European ones. The European market has been at arm s length for many years. The infrastructure is not currently in place to properly service that market. Currently there are no direct flights into Belize from Europe, and often Europeans do not want to overnight in the United States en route to Belize. Even though Europeans often have a multiple destination Central American tour, the lack of direct flights from Europe into Belize does not afford them the opportunity to at least start that tour in Belize. Nonetheless, Europe is an opportunity. Table 1.7 shows that some very small Caribbean islands have tapped into the European market and have made significant steps, both in terms of having direct flights into their respective destinations, and in the case of St. Lucia for example, working very closely with some of the major wholesalers and tour operators in Europe. Evidence of this is reflected in the fact that in 2008 St. Lucia had almost three times the number of European visitors than did Belize.

With the strength of the Euro relative to other world currencies, travel became more affordable to European Union residents. Table 1.15 European Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Origin Country 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 UK 8,007 9,313 9,444 9,319 9,991 9,989 9,799 10,180 10,100-0.8 Germany 3,757 3,841 3,602 4,145 4,269 3,966 4,308 4,054 4,161 2.6 Netherlands (Holland) 3,555 3,906 3,656 4,211 3,585 3,617 4,071 3,496 3,915 12.0 France 1,921 1,829 2,218 3,114 3,308 3,805 3,167 3,126 3,258 4.2 Italy 2,606 3,093 3,122 3,847 2,850 3,080 3,073 2,702 2,371-12.3 Spain 1,211 1,510 1,377 1,737 1,401 1,386 1,727 1,806 1,627-9.9 Sweden 799 680 686 784 836 993 1,053 1,088 1,130 3.8 Switzerland 1,009 988 974 1,019 1,028 804 763 750 713-4.9 Other 4,809 4,576 4,036 5,352 5,500 5,828 6,413 6,972 6,995 0.3 Total 27,674 29,735 29,115 33,528 32,767 33,466 34,373 34,175 34,269 0.3 Figure 1.6 European Overnight Tourists by Origin

Table 1.16 European Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 Jan 2,405 2,661 2,432 2,874 3,327 3,167 3,041 2,818 3,276 16.2 Feb 2,614 2,814 2,536 2,791 2,814 3,439 2,969 3,215 3,088-4.0 Mar 2,471 2,478 2,771 2,462 3,405 3,323 3,292 3,188 3,381 6.1 Apr 2,385 2,335 2,296 2,687 2,645 2,946 2,869 3,052 3,083 1.0 May 1,847 1,684 1,622 2,049 1,868 2,347 2,376 2,108 2,251 6.8 Jun 1,424 1,601 1,690 1,973 1,685 1,950 2,157 2,235 2,142-4.1 Jul 2,704 2,713 2,942 3,363 3,336 2,730 3,213 3,421 3,568 4.3 Aug 3,472 3,982 3,819 4,843 3,773 4,423 4,011 3,691 3,677-0.4 Sep 1,919 1,919 1,646 1,945 1,708 1,770 2,282 2,181 1,599-26.7 Oct 1,590 1,922 1,640 2,186 2,137 2,111 1,683 1,852 1,967 6.2 Nov 2,442 2,591 2,818 3,143 2,937 2,609 3,112 3,372 2,996-11.2 Dec 2,400 3,035 2,903 3,212 3,132 2,652 3,367 3,041 3,240 6.6 TOTAL 27,674 29,735 29,115 33,528 32,767 33,466 34,373 34,175 34,269 0.3 Figure 1.7 European Overnight Visitors by Month

Table 1.17 American Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 Jan 8,807 10,032 9,391 11,213 12,942 13,454 13,583 12,960 13,553 4.6 Feb 11,004 11,147 11,104 12,659 15,184 16,004 15,661 15,568 15,901 2.1 Mar 14,783 13,265 14,108 17,025 17,984 19,705 19,690 21,673 19,586-9.6 Apr 10,150 9,927 8,649 11,740 12,126 13,004 15,405 14,614 12,969-11.3 May 8,991 9,457 9,108 11,061 10,994 11,309 12,829 12,905 13,205 2.3 Jun 10,315 10,731 10,479 12,578 12,968 14,317 15,473 15,525 15,726 1.3 Jul 10,252 10,181 9,121 11,793 12,974 13,339 14,231 13,985 13,833-1.1 Aug 7,190 8,068 6,924 9,251 8,632 9,009 9,128 9,527 9,856 3.5 Sep 4,537 3,640 3,404 4,043 4,856 4,520 4,945 4,783 3,859-19.3 Oct 3,046 4,163 4,152 5,387 5,904 6,231 5,669 6,324 5,611-11.3 Nov 6,020 6,595 7,787 8,598 9,202 9,710 10,047 10,001 9,691-3.1 Dec 9,622 9,088 10,376 11,941 13,601 15,375 14,848 14,702 13,865-5.7 TOTAL 104,717 106,293 104,603 127,288 137,367 145,977 151,510 152,569 147,654-3.2 Figure 1.8 American Overnight Visitors by Month

Table 1.18 Canadian Overnight Tourist Visitors to Belize by Month Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 Jan 982 1,224 1,104 1,230 1,357 1,686 1,917 1,929 2,279 18.2 Feb 1,503 1,429 1,331 1,373 1,813 2,212 2,390 2,654 3,261 22.9 Mar 1,342 1,423 1,308 1,379 1,701 1,886 2,294 2,532 2,899 14.5 Apr 850 815 821 818 1,026 1,090 1,223 1,557 1,466-5.8 May 674 704 671 733 967 914 1,039 1,003 991-1.2 Jun 368 409 460 535 430 527 547 658 740 12.3 Jul 568 637 500 566 730 702 785 865 896 3.5 Aug 420 551 480 482 698 595 692 742 799 7.7 Sep 285 258 260 274 349 342 521 531 369-30.4 Oct 363 326 369 323 429 568 610 627 576-8.1 Nov 625 618 645 682 807 934 1,075 1,263 1,239-1.9 Dec 1,225 1,099 1,236 1,437 1,620 2,123 2,460 2,294 2,178-5.0 TOTAL 9,205 9,492 9,185 9,831 11,926 13,580 15,553 16,655 17,695 6.2 Figure 1.9 Canadian Overnight Visitors by Month

Table 1.19 Latin American Overnight Visitors by Month Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P Change vs. 2007 Jan 3,422 3,440 3,564 3,175 3,373 2,663 2,480 2,545 2,562 0.7 Feb 2,438 3,165 3,185 2,718 2,830 2,125 2,206 2,931 2,330-20.5 Mar 3,013 2,829 4,009 2,458 2,671 3,013 2,938 2,482 3,480 40.2 Apr 3,533 3,285 3,734 3,214 3,193 2,489 2,966 2,762 2,446-11.4 May 2,490 2,869 3,186 2,900 2,508 2,401 2,399 2,376 2,311-2.7 Jun 2,615 2,844 2,888 3,135 2,726 2,422 2,215 2,511 2,219-11.6 Jul 2,826 2,984 3,679 3,553 3,185 1,948 2,340 2,583 2,186-15.3 Aug 2,913 2,099 2,612 3,300 2,466 2,568 2,602 2,298 2,452 6.7 Sep 2,594 1,628 2,011 2,557 2,403 2,169 2,597 2,196 1,890-13.9 Oct 2,464 1,721 3,143 2,692 2,647 2,019 2,023 2,185 1,790-18.1 Nov 3,056 1,991 2,919 2,787 2,673 2,271 2,539 2,718 1,903-30.0 Dec 3,122 2,581 3,662 3,121 3,075 2,570 2,628 2,274 2,419 6.4 TOTAL 34,485 31,437 38,592 35,610 33,751 28,658 29,932 29,860 27,989-6.3 Figure 1.10 Latin American Overnight Visitors by Month

The Cruise Sector The year 2008 marked the fourth consecutive year that cruise arrivals to Belize have decreased. From the height of cruise tourism in 2004 with a total of 851,436 passengers on board, Belize has seen a decrease of approximately 30% to 597,370 in 2008. With more and larger ships being built, Belize must be careful in welcoming cruise passengers more so now than before as outlined in Protecting Belize s Natural Heritage: An Action Plan For Shared Stewardship Of A Cruise Destination. 2 The cruise sector in Belize continues to play an important role in the overall product as it contributes significantly to total tourism expenditure. Table 1.20 Cruise Arrivals by Month 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006P 2007R 2008P % Change January 10,485 4,653 18,448 56,689 94,861 94,774 79,077 95,436 81,649-14.4 February 11,665 7,584 19,056 48,172 87,532 96,667 77,569 86,010 69,449-19.3 March 13,271 8,648 21,822 54,151 89,807 122,802 94,631 95,379 78,847-17.3 April 6,695 3,517 23,989 46,401 72,260 73,327 62,399 64,079 46,043-28.1 May 4,750 0 22,973 24,413 50,642 48,013 27,346 29,970 35,215 17.5 June 899 0 17,473 33,623 57,160 55,432 35,335 26,956 26,065-3.3 July 0 0 20,502 30,602 56,794 33,140 29,443 30,478 36,173 18.7 August 0 0 16,072 38,809 57,018 48,518 33,875 17,368 29,785 71.5 September 0 0 23,095 31,430 45,132 32,554 21,431 15,252 29,421 92.9 October 696 0 33,810 47,356 58,961 23,481 32,551 30,820 32,679 6.0 November 3,648 8,548 46,377 70,377 77,579 73,175 74,960 57,551 58,007 0.8 December 6,022 15,166 56,073 93,173 103,690 98,450 87,314 74,829 74,037-1.1 TOTAL 58,131 48,116 319,690 575,196 851,436 800,333 655,931 624,128 597,370-4.3 Ship Calls 70 48 200 315 406 370 295 278 274-1.4 Figure 1.11 Cruise Sector Performance Belize 2002-2008 2 2007, Conservation International, Belize Ministry of Tourism and Oak Foundation

Table 1.21 Cruise Arrivals by Quarter Quarter 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007R 2008P % Change 1st Quarter 35,421 20,885 59,326 159,012 272,200 314,243 251,277 276,825 229,945-16.9 2nd Quarter 12,344 3,517 64,435 104,437 180,062 176,772 125,080 121,005 107,323-11.3 3rd Quarter 0 0 59,669 100,841 158,944 114,212 84,749 63,098 95,379 51.2 4th Quarter 10,366 23,714 136,260 210,906 240,230 195,104 194,825 163,200 164,723 0.9 TOTAL 58,131 48,116 319,690 575,196 851,436 800,331 655,931 624,128 597,370-4.3 Table 1.22 Cruise Arrivals by Major Cruise Line 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005R 2006 2007P 2008P %Change Passengers Carnival 3,614 11,307 114,347 330,859 455,565 376,887 313,481 286212 308,993 8.0 Norwegian 30,572 32,736 116,170 85,534 174,470 147,434 102,990 117439 102,139-13.0 Royal Caribbean 0 0 63,875 143,999 216,057 165,309 134,772 127409 125,598-1.4 Ship calls Carnival 19 23 73 144 193 140 113 103 110 6.8 Norwegian 16 17 56 46 100 79 52 56 47-16.1 Royal Caribbean 0 0 33 75 93 65 57 51 49-3.9 Cruise calls 70 48 200 315 406 370 295 278 274-1.4 Cruise calls for the three major lines only. R = Revised

Table 1.23 Cruise Passenger Arrivals to Selected Caribbean Destinations 2007- Destination 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2008 % change Antigua & Barbuda 408,812 312,241 385,686 522,753 466,851 471,623 672,788 580,853-13.7 Aruba 487,296 582,195 542,327 576,320 552,819 591,474 481,775 556,090 15.4 Bahamas 2,551,673 2,802,112 2,970,174 3,360,012 3,078,709 3,076,397 2,970,659 2,861,140-3.7 Barbados 527,597 529,319 579,771 721,270 563,588 539,092 616,354 597,523-3.1 Belize 48,116 319,690 575,196 851,436 800,331 655,931 624,128 597,370-4.3 Bermuda 179,549 200,156 226,097 206,133 247,259 335,574 354,022 286,409-19.1 Bonaire 42,181 44,004 53,343 40,077 61,844 97,635 175,702 80.0 British Virgin Islands P 202,517 230,067 304,338 466,601 449,152 443,987 575,211 571,749-0.6 Cayman Islands 1,214,757 1,574,750 1,659,390 1,693,293 1,798,999 1,930,136 1,715,666 1,553,053-9.5 Cozumel (Mexico) 1,595,362 2,227,690 2,862,039 2,519,179 2,322,845 2,488,190 2,569,433 3.3 Curacao 300,183 319,067 279,378 219,385 276,217 321,551 239,433 226,905-5.2 Dominica 207,627 136,859 177,044 383,614 301,294 379,503 354,515 463,355 30.7 Dominican Republic 208,227 246,992 398,263 456,321 289,805 303,489 384,878 417,685 8.5 Grenada P 147,381 135,601 146,925 229,800 274,961 218,684 270,323 292,712 8.3 Jamaica 840,337 865,419 1,132,596 1,099,773 1,135,843 1,336,994 1,179,504 1,088,901-7.7 Martinique P 202,421 200,847 268,542 159,416 93,060 95,812 71,683 87,079 21.5 Puerto Rico 1,350,317 1,203,911 1,234,992 1,390,343 1,315,079 1,338,019 1,437,239 1,392,624-3.1 St Kitts & Nevis 10,405 6,314 8,296 14,011 5,009 St Lucia 490,182 387,180 393,240 481,279 394,364 359,573 610,343 619,680 1.5 St Maarten 867,752 1,055,040 1,171,734 1,348,450 1,488,461 1,421,645 1,421,906 1,345,812-5.4 St Vincent & the Grenadines 76,494 70,314 64,965 74,657 69,391 106,474 105,779 67,537-36.2 Trinidad & Tobago 82,243 60,047 55,532 54,254 67,068 85,677 76,741 44,042-42.6 US Virgin Islands 1,891,389 1,738,710 1,773,948 1,964,689 1,912,539 1,901,275 1,917,878 1,757,067 1.7 P Preliminary n.a. Figures not available SOURCE: Caribbean Tourism Organization http://www.onecaribbean.org Although cruise tourism in Belize has peaked, it is still a major contributor to the economy of Belize and the Caribbean. In its study on behalf of the Florida-Caribbean Cruise Association (FCCA) BREA 1 noted that cruise tourism generated nearly [US] $1.8 billion in direct expenditure, 41,500 jobs and [US] $600 million in employee wages to the Caribbean.

Figure 1.12 Cruise Visitor Arrivals 2000 2008

Figure 1.13 CTO Tourism Tree Source: CTO Customer Relations Participants Handbook p. 15

Economic Impact of Tourism As the diagram above illustrates, tourism s impact extends far beyond airlines (international and local) hotels, tour operators, tour guides, restaurants, nightclubs and souvenir shops. Instead it has a domino effect on the entire economy. In other words tourism has a direct, indirect and induced effect:3 Gross visitor expenditure represents the primary economic stimulus of tourism on the domestic economy. This expenditure produces a first round or direct impact on the economy when it is spent by the visitor to purchase goods and services such as accommodation, meals, transportation and duty-free items. The companies and individuals that provide these goods and services must in turn purchase the necessary inputs in the domestic economy in order to produce the output required by the visitor. Thus the visitor expenditure stimulates a further indirect impact on other sectors of the economy through the purchase of inputs such as electricity, freight transportation, farm produce and manufactured items. Employees of the companies producing these final outputs and inputs would receive wages and salaries and other income that they would spend in the domestic economy that would in turn generate further economic activity. Thus the visitor expenditure has an induced impact on the economy through the expenditure of the wages and salaries. In Belize, tourism impacts agriculture and fisheries in a major way. The construction industry is also affected, as well as the retail sector that supplies the construction industry. Tourism generates government revenues, business revenues as well as salaries for employees. Tourism is a major foreign exchange earner, which is important since Belize produces very few of the items it consumes, from pens to ear-rings, irons to bulbs, computers to motor vehicles. Prior to the world economic crises, the World Travel and Tourism Council (www.wttc.org) estimated that in 2008 tourism generated 238,277,000 jobs in travel and tourism and tourism expenditure was an estimated US $5,890 billion (US $5.9 trillion) of economic activity. They further go on to forecast that in the year 2018 employment generated by travel and tourism will be 296,252,000.4 Tourism Expenditure The tourism expenditure calculation is a lengthy process which is derived from key findings of the Visitor Expenditure and Motivation Survey (VEMS) generally found in Section 4 of the Annual Travel and Tourism Statistical Digest. The VEMS is a 12-month survey conducted jointly by the Belize Tourism Board and the Central Bank of Belize. The 2008 VEMS is presently being analyzed and thus is absent from this version of the publication. 3 World Tourism Organization Tourism Satellite Account, Methodological Reference 4 WTTC Tourism Satellite Accounting Research, 2008 Executive Summary

Table 1.24 Tourism Expenditure 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 Total 44.2 58.8 88.9 89.5 119.3 138.5 142.7 154.1 177.2 170.0 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 Total 216.6 222.9 240.1 241.0 265.6 311.4 345.3 349.4 505.7 585.8 Source: Belize Tourism Board P = Preliminary Figure 1.14 Tourism Expenditure

Below find selective indicators for the SICA region. Table 1.25 Selected Central American Indicators Country Travel Agencies Hotels Occupancy Beds Exchange Rates Belize 222 620 41.1 11,013 Belize Dollar (Bze $2 = US $1 Costa Rica 352 2,595 59.5 N/A Costa Rican Colón (571.0=US$1) El Salvador N/A 352 59.0 14,061 US Dollar (US$1=US$1) Guatemala 652 2,640 48.0 109,067 Quetzal (Q7.6=US$1) Honduras 114 993 64.0 32,883 Lempira (L18.96=US$1) Nicaragua 19 503 N/A 12,494 Córdoba (C$19.8=US$1) Panama 169 462 67.2 39,886 Balboa (B/.1=US$1) Belize, information refers to tour operators, not travel agencies Costa Rica, only agencies registered with the Cost Rican Tourism Institute Source: BOLETÍN DE ESTADÍSTICAS TURÍSTICAS DE CENTROAMÉRICA Secretaría de Integración Turística Centroamericana (SITCA)

SECTION 2. HOTEL STATISTICS

Accommodation Statistics Hotels, Rooms, Beds According to the Hotels and Tourist Accommodation Act Revised Edition 2003 which regulates the accommodation sector, a hotel is defined as any building containing not less than 10 bedrooms for the accommodation for reward of guests or any building containing a group of units containing not less than 10 units, and such units may consist of buildings, cottages, cabanas, apartments, or otherwise for the accommodation of guests for reward, situated within the same complex or precincts 5. However for the purpose of this report, all accommodation establishments are referred to as hotels and each must comply with the legislated minimum standards. 2008 was an impressive year as investors displayed strong confidence in the Belizean tourism product. In five of the nine destinations there were record numbers of hotels as the accommodation sector revealed the highest number of establishments ever. Since 1998, there has been an increase of more than 210 hotels and since 1988, an increase of more than 435 hotels. With 620 hotels, 2008 was the first time Belize reported more than 600 accommodation establishments. With the largest property in the country having 173 rooms available for guest use, Belize can still be regarded as a destination with significant local ownership of the accommodation supply. For the first time ever, there were three destinations with 95 or more hotels. These destinations, Ambergris Caye, Cayo and Placencia represent 49% of hotels while the northern districts of Corozal and Orange Walk account for less than 10%. Ambergris Caye was the first destination to surpass the 100 mark, while Placencia has doubled the number of hotels in just ten years. Corozal has almost tripled in the same time frame. The numbers are even more remarkable looking at the growth in the last 20 years. Since 1988 the total number of hotels has more than tripled from 183 to 620. Again, Placencia has been the area with the most notable growth and tourism has transformed a traditional fishing village into the fastest growing tourism destination. While the economic impact on the village is more obvious, the socio-cultural impact of tourism on traditional fishing villages such as Placencia, Hopkins, Sarteneja, Ambergris Caye and Caye Caulker is yet to be documented. Hotel rooms numbered 6,536 in 2008 which was 336 more rooms, or a 5.4% increase compared to 2007. All destinations reported increases in their room stock except the Orange Walk District, which had the same number as it did a year ago. In 20 years, the Placencia Peninsula has increased its number of rooms twelvefold. The Cayo, Stann Creek and Toledo Districts have been able to quadruple their supply of hotel rooms, while Ambergris Caye and Caye Caulker have more than tripled theirs. 20 years ago, the Belize District and Ambergris Caye were the only destinations with more than 400 rooms. Today, Corozal, Orange Walk and Toledo have still not yet reached that amount of rooms. 5 Hotels and Tourist Accommodation Act, Chapter 285, pp. 6-7

There were a total of 11,213 hotel beds in 2008, up by 6.8% or 711 beds from the year before. In Orange Walk and Placencia the number of beds remained relatively the same, whereas in the Belize District and Ambergris Caye there were increases of at least 175 beds each. Since 1998 there has been an increase of approximately 4,600 beds and an increase of 8,000 beds since 1988. In other words, since 1988 the number of beds in the accommodation sector has more than tripled. WTO Tourism Barometer The World Tourism Organization in its January 2009 Barometer quoted a Deloitte & Touche LLP analysis using STR Global and Smith Travel Research data: 2008 was a difficult time for economies throughout the world and it would seem that the outlook for the year ahead will remain challenging for everyone. Inevitably, the travel and tourism industry was likely to suffer and many destinations saw decline in visitors during 2008, particularly in the latter part of the year as both individuals and corporations slashed travel budgets. As a result, analysis by Deloitte, the business advisory firm reports that although hotel performance across the globe saw deceleration in growth compared to 2007, all but one world region continued to report positive growth year-to-november 2008 Looking ahead, 2009 will be a challenging time for hoteliers around the world as global economies struggle through the recession. As global unemployment rises and consumers and corporations continue to reign in their travel budgets, hotels generally will sell fewer room nights at lower prices. We would expect all regions to be reporting negative numbers this time next year. 6 Table 2.4 Hotel Performance by Region7 Room Occupancy Room occupancy reflects the total rooms occupied as a percentage of the total rooms available for guest use. This includes rooms sold as well as complimentary rooms in use for accommodation purposes. 6 UNWTO World Tourism Barometer Vol. 7 No. 1 January 2009 www.world-tourism.org/facts/menu.html The UNWTO s full contact information can be found later in this publication. 7 Ibid. p. 41

In 2008 the national occupancy rate was 41.1%, with the accommodation sector in Belize facing as difficult a scenario as the global picture. Corozal was the only destination that showed positive growth, while the other destinations experienced the same occupancy levels as last year (which was not bad given the economic climate) or experienced decreases. Although October is not a good yardstick, it was the only month that showed an increase when compared to the 2007 figures. Room Rates For the purpose of this publication, these rates are quoted in Belize Dollars (Bze $2 = US $1). The average room rate increased by $20.27 or by 9.8% from 2007 to 2008. With most destinations having increased room rates, even with the decrease in the occupancy levels, it was still possible to report an overall increase in the revenues generated by the hotel sector. Ambergris Caye and Placencia were the only destinations with nightly room rates greater than Bze $300 (US $150) and well above the national average. Corozal and Caye Caulker were just above Bze $100 (US $50) per room per night and less than half the national average. Room Revenue The Belize Tourism Board generates its revenues from the hotel tax collected from the sale of hotel room nights. Effective April 1, 2005 the hotel tax rate went from 7% to 9%. The hotel tax collections in 2008 revealed that the accommodation sector generated some Bze $130.3 million in revenues. This increase of Bze $2.1 million over 2007 reflected a 1.7% growth. As expected, Ambergris Caye generated the bulk of hotel room revenue with 42.3%. The Cayo District was next with 13.3%. These were followed by Placencia and the Belize district with 12.4% and 12.1% respectively.

Hotel Employment According to figures provided by the Social Security Board, Cayo, Placencia and Toledo showed increases in employment. Overall however, employment in the hotel sector was down by 1.7%. This was the first decrease in the hotels sector since a 1.0% decrease in 2002. In 2008 a total of 6,471 persons were employed in hotels, down from 6,580 in 2007. Figure 2.10 Hotel Employment by Area It seems that the trend is now irreversible as 2008 marked the eight consecutive year that there have been more males than females working in the hotel industry, and the gap appears to be widening significantly. In 2008 there were 59.9% and 40.1% males and females respectively compared to 1991 where there were 41.3% and 58.7% males and females respectively employed in this sector. Belizeans accounted for 81.7% of employees in this sector compared to 18.3% foreigners. One of the areas where there is a great opportunity for Belizeans is for chefs in the accommodation sector. There is a serious shortage of Belizean chefs whereby work permits have to be granted to foreigners to fill this gap. To highlight this need, every year the Belize Tourism Board provides culinary training as well as hosts the Taste of Belize Culinary Competition to encourage Belizeans to get involved. 2009 Social Security Board. Table 2.11, Table 2.12 and Table 2.13, including text and data compilations, is the exclusive property of the Social Security Board, and is protected by Belize and international copyright laws. All content and all information herein have been produced by the Social Security Board for nonprofit, research, and educational use only. This document is not intended for direct or indirect commercial use. No part may be reproduced in any form, displayed in any form, or reused for any purpose or by any means without prior written authorization of the Social Security Board. A fee may accompany such written authorization. Written authorization to reproduce, display, or reuse the content and information herein shall be provided on the condition that the content and information shall not be modified in any way, and that a copyright notice accompany all copies or reproduction. The Belize Tourism Board has received the expressed authorization to produce this information in this digest, which serves as an information piece for the tourism industry and the public at large.

Employment in the Travel Trade A large number of tour guides did not renew their licenses in 2008, resulting in a 16.8% decrease in the number of tour guides countrywide from 2007 to 2008. This was most obvious in the Belize District, Ambergris Caye and the Stann Creek District where there were 92, 44 and 24 less guides respectively. In contrast, there were 17 more tour operators in 2008 than there were in 2007, reflecting an 8.3% increase. (By law, tour operators are required to hire only licensed tour guides.) Belize District had the most tour operators, followed by Ambergris Caye and the Cayo District. Ambergris Caye had the largest increase in the number of tour operators, from 30 in 2007 to 46 in 2008.

According to the WTTC s 2008 analysis, Belize s tourism horizon looks very promising. 1-2 Queen Victoria Terrace Sovereign Court London E1 W 3HA United Kingdom Tel: + 44 (0)870 727 9882 + 44 (0)207 481 8007 Fax: + 44 (0)870 728 9882 + 44 (0)207 488 1008 EMAIL: enquiries@wttc.travel UNWTO World Tourism Organization Capitan Haya 42 28020 Madrid, Spain Tel: + 34 91 567 81 00 Fax: + 34 91 571 37 33 omt@unwto.org www.unwto.org

SECTION 3. VISITATION STATISTICS TO SELECTED ATTRACTIONS

Site Visitation Statistics - 2008 Belize is well known for its sites and attractions. These come in the form of the natural and built environments, both marine and terrestrial. This section reports on visits to selected sites by international visitors and Belizeans. Cruise ship visitors still account for a significant portion of visitors to many of these sites, and with the significant decrease of cruise passenger arrivals, it was likely that the visitation to sites and attractions would fall. Archaeological Sites The Institute of Archaeology (www.nichbelize.org) reported an increase in visitors to the Mayan sites in 2008. This was the second consecutive year an increase was reported after two straight years of decrease had interrupted several years of increases in the number of visitors to these sites. The graph below shows the share by site visited. Altun Ha was by far the most visited destination with an 8.4% increase in 2008 compared to 2007. Looking at the 10-year time period, there has been an increase in visitation to Altun Ha of more than 350% since 1998. Figure 3.1 Site Share of Visitors to Maya Sites Xunantunich in western Belize, was the second most visited Maya site in 2008 and with approximately 48,000 visitors, saw an 8.0% decrease. Lamanai on the other hand, hosted approximately 32,000 visitors and experienced an 8.9% increase. Overall, there was a marginal increase of 0.5% in the number of visitors. Again, comparing the 1998 figure of 82,529 visitors to the 215,075 in 2008, it can be seen that there has been a 160.6% increase. Cruise passengers accounted for 79,360 of the 215,075 visitors to these sites. This 37% by cruise visitors were to four sites only, namely 7,205 to Lamanai in the Orange Walk District, 60,932 to Altun Ha in the Belize District, plus 1,676 to Cahal Pech and 9,547 to Xunantunich both in the Cayo District. Altun Ha is most convenient to cruise passengers as it is 6 miles off the Northern Highway at Sandhill Village, for a total of approximately 25 miles which can be covered in about fifty minutes.

Overnight tourists accounted for the largest share of visitors to archaeological sites, followed by cruise visitors. Other visitors combined represented less than 20% of total visitors in 2008. Figure 3.2 Visitors to Maya Sites by Type of Visitor

Hol Chan Marine Reserve Visitors to the Hol Chan Marine Reserve - HCMR (www.holchanbelize.org) for the years 1998-2008 are documented in this publication. According to their website, Over 160 species of fish have been identified in the reserve, along with nearly 40 species of corals, 5 sponges, 8 algaes, 2 sea grasses, 3 marine mammals and 3 species of sea turtle. The entire reserve covers approximately three square miles (7.8 sq km) and is divided into four zones: Zone A - The Reef Zone B - The Sea grass Beds Zone C - The Mangroves Zone D - Shark Ray Alley Total visitors to the Hol Chan Marine Reserve were up for the second year in a row. The increase of 18.5% or roughly 10,000 persons was completely due to visitors from abroad, while Belizean visitors decreased by 12.9% or approximately 500 persons. Foreigners accounted for the divers (13.4%) and snorkelers (81.2%) visiting the HCMR, and represented 94.6% of visitors. Belizeans accounted for the remaining 5.4%.

The Belize Zoo Recent information on visitors to the Belize Zoo (www.belizezoo.org) has been unavailable.

Protected Areas Managed by the Belize Audubon Society The Belize Audubon Society (BAS) (www.belizeaudubon.org) manages nine protected areas including: Actun Tunichil Muknal (co-managed with the Institute of Archaeology) Blue Hole National Monument Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary * Crooked Tree Wildlife Sanctuary * Guanacaste National Park * Half Moon Caye Natural Monument St. Herman's Blue Hole National Park * Tapir Mountain Nature Reserve Victoria Peak National Monument Figure 3.9 Visitors to B.A.S. Managed Sites in 1991 and 2008 The BAS reports annually the visitation to selected sites as shown in the tables that follow. Overall there was an increase of 10.9% in the total number of visitors to the sites reported by BAS. This was due mainly to the increase reported by the three parks, the Half Moon Caye Natural Monument (an island destination), St. Herman s Blue Hole National Park (inland sinkhole) and Actun Tunichil Muknal (cave site).

The Mountain Pine Ridge Forest Reserve This reserve (http://ambergriscaye.com/pages/town/parkmountainpineridge.html) has seen inconsistent numbers of visitors for several years. From 2001 onward the numbers reported by the Forestry Department also included workers of the Chalilo Dam. At the time of this publication, the figures for 2008 were not available.

The Community Baboon Sanctuary After three consecutive years of increases in the number of visitors to the Community Baboon Sanctuary (www.howlermonkeys.org), 2006 was the second consecutive year it saw more than a 20% decrease in visitors. Like other sites, the growth and decreases can be directly linked with the increases and subsequent decreases in cruise visitors to Belize. At the time of this publication, the figures for 2007 and 2008 were not available.

Caves Branch Caves Branch (www.travelbelize.org/activities/rainforest-inland/cave-tubing-2.html) is a recent attraction and caters primarily to cruise visitors. At this location visitors can experience the thrill of an inner tube ride down the river through a series of caves. Table 3.13 Visitors to Caves Branch Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 TOTAL 19,278 65,993 94,696 102,359 97,048 102,967 94,627 The Museum of Belize The Museum of Belize (www.travelbelize.org/attractions/historical-cultural-sites/museum-of-belize- 2.html) was opened on February 12, 2002. Since then, it has been a popular stop for visitors and locals. The majority of locals are students. Table 3.14 Visitors to the Museum of Belize Year 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 TOTAL 14,013 13,750 16,736 21,695 23,718 11,094 11,532