Asia/Singapore Saturday, 30th May 2026
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Melbourne to host world’s largest conference on lung cancer in 2029

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Hosting the World Conference on Lung Cancer in Melbourne highlights Australia’s dedication to world-class research, early detection, and equitable care

Melbourne has secured the prestigious World Conference on Lung Cancer for 2029, a move set to bring more than 6,500 global experts to the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre.

Presented by the International Association for the Study of Lung Cancer, the event at is the world’s largest multidisciplinary gathering dedicated to thoracic malignancies. Delegates from over 100 countries will converge at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre to share research and explore therapies aimed at improving global patient care.

Hosting the World Conference on Lung Cancer in Melbourne highlights Australia’s dedication to world-class research, early detection, and equitable care

The bid was secured by the Melbourne Convention Bureau in collaboration with the IASLC and Cancer Council Victoria, with support from the Victorian Government and Tourism Australia.

The announcement reinforces Victoria’s standing as a global leader in cancer survival and innovation. The state is home to the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre – Australia’s only dedicated public cancer hospital – and the Victorian Comprehensive Cancer Centre alliance.

Cancer Council Victoria, the state’s largest not-for-profit funder of cancer research, continues to invest over A$20 million (US$14 million) annually, contributing to a 30 per cent improvement in survival rates for common cancers over the last 30 years.

Victoria’s current roadmap, the Victorian Cancer Plan 2024-2028, targets halving preventable cancers and increasing survival through research excellence and equitable care. This follows a successful decade where the state achieved its goal of saving 10,000 lives by 2025.

The 2029 conference follows a series of major milestones for Victoria. In July 2025, the Australian Government launched a A$260 million National Lung Cancer Screening Program, providing free low-dose CT scans to high-risk individuals. Following that in November 2025, Melbourne hosted 86 countries for a landmark summit to set the global cancer agenda, focusing on AI in care and health equity.

Ascott and New Vision break new ground in Singapore’s CBD

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This flagship serves as a blueprint for Ascott’s future

The Ascott Limited (Ascott) and New Vision Holding (New Vision) have broken ground on Ascott Shenton Way Singapore, a landmark development set to become the global flagship for the Ascott brand.

Located in the heart of Tanjong Pagar, the project – slated for completion in 4Q2029 – marks a significant shift for the brand toward design-led, wellness-centred hospitality.

This flagship serves as a blueprint for Ascott’s future

The 29-storey mixed-use development features a ‘vertical rainforest’ concept and a biophilic design theme. The property will have 42 hotel rooms for short-stay guests alongside 95 serviced apartments for extended stays, all featuring design motifs inspired by Tanjong Pagar’s maritime heritage.”

Meanwhile, facilities include a meditation lounge, wellness spa, forest verandah, and a rooftop garden.

The architectural vision is a collaboration between RSP (architecture and engineering); Benoy (immersive landscape and greenery); and Elicyon (uxury interior design).

The building is also targeting the BCA Green Mark Platinum (Super Low Energy) certification, utilising energy-efficient systems and sustainable materials.

Thai AirAsia welcomes new GM

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Thai AirAsia has appointed Phairat Pornpathananangoon as general manager, effective January 31, 2026.

He succeeds Santisuk Klongchaiya, who is retiring from the role and will continue with the company as adviser.

Pornpathananangoon has more than 20 years’ experience with AirAsia. He joined Thai AirAsia in 2004 as financial planning manager, was appointed chief financial officer of Thai AirAsia X in 2014, and returned to Thai AirAsia as chief financial officer in 2021.

Modena by Fraser Shenzhen debuts in Luohu District

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Studio Deluxe Twin

Frasers Hospitality has expanded its China portfolio with the opening of Modena by Fraser Shenzhen, a development situated in the heart of the Luohu District.

Located within the Shennan 1001 mixed-use complex, the property offers 325 apartments tailored for corporate travelers and relocating professionals seeking a high-connectivity base in one of China’s primary innovation hubs.

Studio Deluxe Twin

Designed specifically for long-term stays, the units range from 31m2 studios to 103m2 bedroom apartments. The floor plans emphasise “transformable living,” featuring open-ended hobby zones, loft configurations, and flexible furniture that allow residents to customize their workspace. Each apartment is fully equipped with a kitchenette, washer-dryer, and high-speed Wi-Fi.

On-site amenities include a full-sized outdoor pickleball court, gym, yoga studio, and a dedicated residents’ lounge. To assist with local integration, the property provides Resident Ambassadors and curated neighbourhood orientations.

Modena by Fraser Shenzhen is located eight minutes from The MIXC retail hub and offers proximity to major commercial landmarks and cultural sites. The development is also strategically positioned for cross-border business, providing efficient access to Hong Kong via the Luohu, Wenjindu, and Liantang crossings. Connectivity within Shenzhen is supported by a short drive to Luohu Port and immediate access to the Shenzhen Metro’s Line 2 and Line 5 at Huang Bei Ling station.

Fresh prospects

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The outlook for Asia Pacific’s (APAC) exhibitions industry, which has been outperforming other regions for some two decades, continues to be positive, but the performance in 2026 will be more nuanced.

Mark Cochrane, regional director APAC, UFI, told TTGmice: “China’s growth will be slower due to a softer economic outlook as well as geopolitical and trade tensions.”

But impetus, he remarked, is coming from India, on the rise right now due to new venue capacity and robust economic growth.

“South-east Asia is also growing strongly, driven by good economic expansion and as many industries diversify supply chains, shifting capacity to countries such as Vietnam and Indonesia,” he continued.

Michael Duck, executive vice president, commercial development, Informa Markets and Informa Group, commented the China Plus One strategy continues to reshape supply chains, driving exhibition growth in Vietnam, Thailand and India.

Duck added: “Growth drivers include post-pandemic recovery, increased corporate spending, government digitalisation initiatives, and APAC’s position as the world’s fastest-growing consumer market offering many opportunities for international exhibitors.”

But geopolitical uncertainties affecting international participation, rising venue costs, and infrastructure gaps in emerging markets are key challenges.

The region also faces tariff-driven headwinds in 2026, with regional GDP growth projected to slow to 3.7 per cent from 4.3 per cent in 2025 due to US trade tensions.

AI and AI-related businesses will outperform most sectors, Cochrane opined, adding that the healthcare sector will boom due to ageing populations, rising affluence in the region, and increase in medical tourism.

He added: “Renewable energy and rising energy demand that comes with rising affluence, technology innovation, and pressure to stop climate change will also drive growth.”

“Healthcare and medical technology is strongly driven by the APAC medtech market, which is projected to reach good growth levels by 2026, fuelled by personalised medicine and telemedicine growth,” Duck agreed.

Additional bright spots include sustainable energy exhibitions capitalising on the region’s green transition initiatives and renewable energy investments, he added.

Conference & Exhibition Management Services’ managing director, Edward Liu, told TTGmice: “A lot of attention is shifting to South-east Asia and it has been accelerating since two years ago.”

Liu sees Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam taking centre stage, and drawing the attention of international organisers in the next five years, predicting South-east Asian events will increase between five and 10 per cent.

Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Vietnam are also developing more exhibition facilities to cope with demand, with Liu naming Jakarta’s Nusantara International Convention Exhibition, and Malaysia’s Petronas and its property arm, KLCC Holdings, being involved in expansion and new development projects in Kuala Lumpur.

Organisers and venues are also expected to do more to reduce waste and their carbon footprint, according to Darren Seah, executive director, Messe Berlin Asia Pacific. He also pointed out that the industry’s greatest challenge remains balance – ensuring that innovation and growth are sustainable, inclusive and beneficial to all stakeholders.

“In 2025, participation and business activity expanded across all major markets, and this positive trajectory is expected to continue into 2026,” Seah said.

For Messe Berlin, growth has been “particularly strong” in Central Asia, Africa, and India, alongside the newly-expanded Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone.

Iloilo City secures TIEZA funding for MICE expansion and heritage restoration

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Iloilo City mayor Raisa Treñas-Chu (centre) and TIEZA’s Mark Lapid (fourth from left) lead the Memorandum of Agreement signing for the grant

Iloilo City is strengthening its position as a premier tourism hub, securing a 17.6 million pesos (US$298,672) grant from the Tourism Infrastructure and Enterprise Zone Authority (TIEZA) to boost its business events sector, alongside 150 million pesos dedicated to the redevelopment of its heritage plazas.

The grant, which will be disbursed over five years will focus on capacity building. Led by the MICE Center and the MICE Alliance, initial efforts will include stakeholder training, updated tourism inventories, and targeted marketing campaigns to attract large-scale international delegations. A dedicated project team will oversee these initiatives to ensure long-term economic benefits for the Ilonggo community.

Iloilo City mayor Raisa Treñas-Chu (centre) and TIEZA’s Mark Lapid (fourth from left) lead the Memorandum of Agreement signing for the grant

TIEZA’s chief operating officer Mark Lapid noted that the investment is driven by the city’s unique competitive edge, citing a collaborative vision championed by former senator Franklin Drilon to formulate a comprehensive business events development plan.

“Iloilo City is strategically positioned to fulfil its vision of becoming a leading hub for MICE, supported by its advantageous geographic location, expanding direct air connectivity from major Asian destinations, diverse tourism assets, and a highly skilled service workforce,” stated Lapid.

He added that while the city’s branding as a UNESCO Creative City of Gastronomy and cultural hub is already established, the priority now is to promote and sustain that momentum through national and private sector partnerships.

Iloilo City Mayor Raisa Treñas revealed that the city is currently facing a “good problem” of overwhelming demand.

Last year, the Iloilo Convention Center (ICON) hosted over 150 events, and as of January 2026, the venue is already fully booked with a waitlist extending up to one year.

The ICON, recently named the Philippines’ Best Convention Center at the 6th Annual World MICE Awards, remains the flagship of an infrastructure that includes over 5,100 hotel rooms and the capacity to host 25,000 delegates.

Beyond the convention halls, a 150 million pesos TIEZA commitment will fund the redevelopment of the city’s iconic plazas in Molo, La Paz, and Jaro.

Mayor Treñas noted that this restoration will ensure Iloilo’s public spaces are on par with those found in European cities.

Penang eyes Indian market surge as direct flights boost arrivals

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From left: PCEB’s Ashwin-Gunasekeran; and Tourism Malaysia’s Ahmad Johanif Mohd Ali at the press conference; photo by Rohit Kaul

Following the successful launch of IndiGo’s direct daily service from Chennai, the Penang Convention & Exhibition Bureau (PCEB) is aggressively pushing for expanded air connectivity to tap into India’s rapidly growing travel market.

“We are currently in discussions with other Indian airlines to explore the launch of direct flights from additional Indian cities to Penang,” Ashwin Gunasekeran, CEO of PCEB, told TTGmice on the sidelines of a press conference in New Delhi last week.

From left: PCEB’s Ashwin-Gunasekeran; and Tourism Malaysia’s Ahmad Johanif Mohd Ali at the press conference; photo by Rohit Kaul

The direct route, which commenced on December 21, 2024, has already triggered a significant uptick in Indian tourist arrivals, particularly within the business events segment. Prior to the IndiGo launch, India did not rank among Penang’s top 10 source markets. However, between January and November 2025, the destination recorded 42,367 visitors arriving specifically via direct flights from India.

“The actual number of Indian tourists is significantly higher, as many travellers transit through Kuala Lumpur before reaching Penang. Within just four months of IndiGo’s direct connectivity, India emerged as Penang’s sixth-largest source market,” Gunasekeran explained.

As part of a strategic push to grow business event arrivals, PCEB recently launched the ninth edition of its India roadshow series, Simply Penang. The engagement began in Mumbai on January 19 and New Delhi on January 21, with upcoming stops scheduled for Kochi (January 23), and Chennai (January 27).

A delegation of 10 Malaysian suppliers, including hotels, DMCs, and conference organisers, is participating in the series to engage with the local travel trade.

“The medical and semiconductor sectors are driving demand for meetings and conventions, while multi-level marketing companies and financial institutions are fueling incentive group demand from the Indian market,” said Gunasekeran.

This year, PCEB projects a 30 per cent increase in overall Indian tourist arrivals. While market-specific business events arrivals are not available, the destination hosted over 2,900 total business events from January to November 2025.

Jublia rebrands to Jublia AI, shifting event tech to AI-native model

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Jublia AI is designed from the ground up to be AI-native

Singapore-based event technology provider Jublia has rebranded as Jublia AI, pivoting from a traditional engagement tool to an intelligence-driven ecosystem designed to automate organiser workflows and personalise the attendee experience.

“The shift from Jublia to Jublia AI is not just a rebranding exercise; it is a fundamental pivot in how we believe events can leverage AI,” Kuan Yan Tan, CEO and co-founder of Jublia AI, told TTGmice.

Jublia AI is designed from the ground up to be AI-native

“We placed AI at the core to improve how we collaborate with event organisers and to bring new dimensions to our existing features – making them ten times better in engaging audiences.”

For attendees, what this change means is that attendees can interact with apps and websites using natural language to find information instantly, and AI functions more like a “personal concierge” than a software tool.

Meanwhile, for time-starved event organisers, Jublia AI provides AI Observability, where the system moves beyond standard analytics to capture real-time behavioural intent, allowing organisers to make data-backed adjustments during live events.

This new workflow will also allow organisers to act as partners in training the AI, and ensuring the system understands the specific nuances of each event for more accurate matchmaking.

“We rebuilt the platform so intelligence is embedded at the core, not layered on top,” said Tan.

Over the last six months, Jublia AI has also integrated AI agents into its internal product development and support teams. Tan clarified that while AI is central to Jublia’s future, the technology is intended to augment human roles within the “people-to-people” event industry rather than replace them.

“Engagement alone is no longer enough,” said Tan. “The next era belongs to intelligence: events that understand context, adapt in real time, and act when people need answers.”

Iconic Group names executive assistant manager, sales and marketing

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Catherine Ooi has been appointed executive assistant manager, sales and marketing at the Iconic Group. In this role, she is responsible for commercial leadership across Iconic Marjorie Penang, a Tribute Portfolio Hotel by Marriott International; Iconic Hotel Penang, Bukit Mertajam; and Iconic Regency Service Residences.

Ooi joins the group following her role as director of sales and marketing at Aloft Langkawi Pantai Tengah. She has more than 20 years of experience in hospitality and has held senior commercial roles with Shangri-La, St Giles and Hilton. She reports to group general manager Kevin Cheah.

Anne Newman to lead visitor economy at ChristchurchNZ

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ChristchurchNZ has appointed Anne Newman as general manager of visitor economy. She starts in the role today and is responsible for leading the agency’s visitor economy function, including strategy and delivery across tourism and major events.

Newman was previously founding chief executive of Christchurch Adventure Park, where she led the operation through fires, flooding and the Covid pandemic. She was recognised with the Emerging Tourism Leader Award at the New Zealand Tourism Awards in 2024.

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