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The travel sector is already feeling the strain from soaring fuel costs and supply concerns about the energy crisis, with airlines cutting capacity, Europe concerned about energy security, and travelers shifting toward trains, staycations, and drive-to destinations. New booking data suggests the impact is no longer just about sentiment: it is now showing up in how and where people plan to travel.
The New York Times reported that oil prices soared, hitting a new wartime high, on Thursday, as President Trump asserted the blockade on the Straits of Hormuz will continue until Tehran gives up its nuclear program.
It prompted David Wallace-Wells in the same paper to call it an ‘Everything War’, summing up some of the issues affecting travel and lifestyle since the war began:
In Europe, the International Energy Agency has tabled proposals to save energy, such as working from home and traveling less, and the travel industry is already seeing signs of a drop-off in bookings in some places. And European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has said that the conflict is costing the EU nearly 500 million a day in higher energy costs.
Politico reported this week on another factor causing concern: Europe has knowledge gaps in real-time monitoring and analysis of its oil and gas reserves, leaving it a little in the dark about how much fuel remains, which may affect when and how it makes emergency decisions.
The German Chancellor, Friedrich Merz, warned that the war in Iran could have a similar economic fallout to rival COVID or the Russian invasion of Ukraine, saying it's “beyond what we could imagine” in terms of energy crises.
The result is that vacation costs are increasing and there are already signs that the conflict and surrounding fears of energy supplies and safety are having an impact on decisions around holiday bookings:
It's clear, then, that the energy crisis caused by the conflict is not only raising prices but reshaping demand, with the early winners being closer to home trips, and rail and road vacations.
ForbesEuropeans Urged To Travel Less As Fear Of Energy Shortage IncreasesForbesAir Travel Disruption And Skyrocketing Prices—Should Travelers Book Now?By Alex LedsomForbesWar And Rising Costs Threaten Europe’s Summer Tourism SeasonBy Alex Ledsom
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