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The way it was in George Town transport wise

Posted by: free&fair on Wed, 29 March 2006 12:31:14 (509 reads)

Penang had a history of experimentations in modes of transports -we had horse drawn trams, electric trams, trolley buses, steam engine driven buses etc, before diesel buses took over under Lim Kean Siew's directive. The story by STAR should inspire Penangites to think boldly about reforming and updating our transport system. The change currently embarked upon is too little too late: complaints come from overly `manja' bus operators -who complained of having to follow same vehicles regulations as all others,and the public who are not fully informed of where the improvements are eg are there more routes coverage compared to before? Would there be timetables ? Would the buses be refurbished ? It does not look like the State Government is fully prepared -as are the bus operators, to push through the revamp of the bus system. Then how could it succeed after the oil hike protests are bulldozed off the streets by the State apparatus @police@FRU ?
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Where's the pearl? (Chart 8)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Mon, 21 June 2004 20:55:05 (695 reads)

8. What Pearl? Relying On Less Lucrative Domestic Tourists

This chart shows the long-term trend that Penang increasingly relies on domestic tourists (green area). From 2000 to 2003 especially, the portion of foreign and local tourists reversed from 62%-38% to 38%-62%.

Although domestic tourists are welcomed and bring revenues too,

  • Domestic tourists generally spend less, and avoid beach and luxury hotels
  • Bring in more cars, traffic jams, and parking problems
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Where's the pearl? (Chart 7)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Fri, 21 May 2004 01:54:07 (829 reads)

7. What Pearl? International Tourists Down Sharply Before SARS

International visitor arrivals to Penang were down in 1997, and were especially negative during 2000-2003. Penang's total visitor arrival growths were negative, except during 1998-2000, the unsustainable, post-devaluation honeymoon.

  • International arrivals fell sharply, by -18% in 2001, -7.3% in 2002, and a shocking and further -35% in 2003.
  • Total visitor arrivals fell -8.2% in 2001, then -1.3% in 2002, then -11.6% in 2003
  • Domestic visitor arrivals rose 2000-2003 (but generally spend less than international tourist). We stay home because the ringgit devaluation made us poorer internationally.
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Where's the pearl? (Chart 6)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Wed, 19 May 2004 16:17:37 (839 reads)

6. Penang's Hotel Occupancies Down

Penang hotel occupancy trends are down in the long term. The falls started before 911, and long before the SARS-hit 2003

  • Overall Penang hotel occupancy rate (blue line) declined from 61.6% in 1996 to 49.8% in 2003 in a steady downtrend. Penang hotels are more than half empty in 2003
  • City hotel occupancy (green line) started higher at 65% in 1996, dipped quickly to 52.4% in 1998, and remained generally flat to reach 51.9% in 2003. This line probably reflects business and domestic travelers.
  • Beach hotels occupancy (pink line) went through roller coaster, but also sharply down. It went from 59.6% in 1996, seemed to enjoy some buoyancy from ringgit devaluation of 1998, reached 66.7% in 2000, and went all the way downhill to 46.7% in 2003. Between 2000 and 2003, it went from 2/3 occupied (already weak) to 46.7%, below the average.
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Where's the pearl? (Chart 5)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Tue, 18 May 2004 16:16:39 (686 reads)

5. Suffocated: Air Passengers Stagnated and Down

Penang's total air passenders in 2003 (2.43 million) was down to the lowest level since 1992 (orange lline). The upward trend in early 1990's has completely broken down. Long-term domestic arrival was flat: it declined from 1996 (green line), rebound since 2001, but remained lower than 1992, despite total economic growth. International passengers (blue line), despite a brief post-devaluation spike, by 2003 has slided to the low levels of 1991-1992.

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Where's the Pearl? (Chart 4)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Mon, 17 May 2004 20:42:28 (1395 reads)

4. Penang Suffocated: Aircraft Arrivals Down Long-Term

There are 25% fewer airplanes arriving in Penang compared to early 1990's. Aircraft arrivals declined most sharply after 1996. A small rebound in in 2001 was followed by even lower levels by 2003.

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Where's the pearl? (Chart 3)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Mon, 17 May 2004 13:08:53 (739 reads)

3. Penang Choked: Car/Motorcycle Density Doubled Population Weight in Nation

In terms of vehicle density per person, Penang is 2.2 times the national average for motorcycles, 1.7x for private car, 0.8x for taxi (for a tourist, urban area).

When private cars and motorcycles are combined, Penang has twice the density of the nation (red column). That is, Penang has 0.92 private car or motorcycle per man, woman, senior citizen or baby, while Malaysia has 0.46 private car or motorcycle per person.

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Where's The Pearl? (Chart 2)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Fri, 14 May 2004 18:52:03 (984 reads)

2. Choked: Above-Average Car/Motorcycle per Capita, Below-Average Taxis

Penang has only 5.7% of Malaysia's population. But it has 12.6% of Malaysia's motorcycles, 9.7% of private cars, and 11.2% of private cars-plus-motorcycles (combining these two categories makes sense because car and motorcycle users are usually mutually exclusive). Yet it has only 4.4% of the taxis in Malaysia.

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Where's The Pearl? (Intro)

Posted by: Kah Seng on Thu, 13 May 2004 20:46:14 (865 reads)

Introduction: Penang's Problem Is Governance and Politics

The Pearl of Orient? But where's the pearl? If you think this question is unappreciative of Penang, wait till you see the facts. In a series of 13 charts on Penang, we will see general economic decline and a rather bleak outlook.

The first chart highlights Penang's relative poverty in Malaysia. Despite that poverty, Penang has double the national average for private vehicles, which explain why Penang's road and parking spaces are bursting at the seams.

Following a decade-long slump in tourism in Penang, hotels and airport will probably continue to be under-utilized even with a post-SARS rebound. Shrinking approved manufacturing projects, meanwhile, predict bleak outlooks for jobs and Penang's climb up the "value-added ladder".

Read More (122 words) 1 comment

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