Asia/Singapore Wednesday, 22nd April 2026
Page 464

Amelia Roziman helms BESarawak as CEO

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The Ministry of Tourism, Arts and Culture Sarawak and the Board of Directors of Business Events Sarawak (BESarawak) have confirmed Amelia Roziman’s appointment as BESarawak’s new CEO.

In this role, Amelia has been tasked with honing Sarawak’s business events industry towards defining a higher purpose of developing, bidding, and hosting business events.

She has more than 20 years of experience in branding and marketing and 15 years of experience in business events.

Amelia was one of the pioneer members of BESarawak when it was formed in 2006, where she started as a sales coordinator and ascended the corporate ladder.

St Regis debuts in China’s coastal city of Qingdao

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The St. Regis Qingdao has opened within the Haitian Center in Qingdao, making it the first Marriott International luxury brand hotel in the north-eastern Shangdong region.

Occupying the 58th to 78th floors of the 369-meter-tall Haitian Center, there are 233 guestrooms in total, including 30 luxury suites with ocean views.

Event planners can avail 2,000m2 of dedicated space, which includes the 900m2 Astor Ballroom which can hold up to 480 people banquet-style, or be split into three smaller ballrooms upon request. There are also five smaller spaces for more intimate functions or C-suite meetings.

Facilities on-site include the St. Regis Spa with five treatment rooms, a fitness centre, and indoor swimming pool. There are also five dining outlets on-site, such as the Cantonese restaurant Yan Ting, classic New York steakhouse-esque The Carvery, and all-day dining space Social.

Pascal Bertrand helms Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort & Villas

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Anantara Iko Mauritius Resort & Villas has appointed a new general manager, Pascal Bertrand.

Bertrand brings over 35 years of luxury hospitality experience from around the globe, having worked with international hotel brands globally.

The French national got a taste for the hotelier life when he started his career in F&B, as sous-chef for Eleven Maple Street Restaurant in Florida. He continued his career in F&B by joining The Ritz Carlton in Atlanta as assistant banqueting manager, followed by The Ritz Carlton Cancun and The Ritz Carlton in Florida.

He progressed through the ranks of hotel operations before taking his first general manager position at the Legends Hotel Mauritius, in 2010.

Club Med promotes Rachael Harding to CEO ESAP

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Club Med has appointed Rachael Harding as the CEO of East, South Asia and Pacific, succeeding Xavier Desaulles, who led Club Med Asia Pacific Markets for the past five years.

In her new role based in Shanghai, Harding will lead the stewardship of the Asia Pacific (excluding Greater China) region as they navigate the current market dynamics and prepare for an aggressive rebound. She will also drive the advancement of a profitable growth strategy focused on nurturing matured markets and elevating the emerging markets.

Harding joined Club Med in 2018 as the general manager for Club Med Pacific (Australia and New Zealand). Over three years, her leadership led to the successful growth of the Pacific market by 26 per cent.

Harding possesses over 20 years of experience in the travel sector, spanning multiple sectors of the tourism industry across retail, corporate & wholesale in the Australian, New Zealand, UK and European markets.

Prior to joining Club Med, she spent 15 years working with The Travel Corporation on brands including Trafalgar and Contiki in various sales, distribution and marketing roles.

Raffles Udaipur makes two pre-opening appointments

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From left: Abhishek Sharma; and Rajan Malhotra

Raffles Udaipur, the brand’s first hotel in India, has made two new appointments – Abhishek Sharma as general manager, and Rajan Malhotra as director of sales and marketing.

Abhishek has over two decades of outstanding experience in luxury hospitality, and joins Raffles Udaipur with over nine years of leading teams in the role of general manager, throughout luxury hotels and resorts, including The Oberoi Group in India and Soneva Fushi Resort in The Maldives.

From left: Abhishek Sharma; and Rajan Malhotra

Prior to that, Abhishek worked as head of F&B with renowned hotels in India, Maldives, Mauritius and Egypt. His journey in F&B and hotel management includes various pre-opening and opening roles.

Meanwhile, Rajan will take charge of introducing the Raffles brand experience in India, as well as planning and implementing strategies to support the hotel’s positioning. He will be leading the sales and marketing team, exploring business opportunities and will be responsible for the budgeting, forecasting and achieving the hotel’s commercial objectives.

Rajan brings along with him 18 years of experience in the hospitality industry, with successful stints at Shangri-La Hotels & Resorts, Hyatt Services India, The Zuri Group of Hotels & Resorts, Le Méridien Jaipur Resort & Spa, Taj Palace, New Delhi and The Grand New Delhi.

New Zealand expertise serves up new agri-food-tech event

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An employee preparing milk samples for testing

New Zealand has launched a new event, the 2035 Oceania Summit, which will be held in Auckland in 2022 and showcase local solutions for global climate impact.

The regional follow-up summit will draw on the experience of New Zealand-based global agri-food-tech consultancy Wharf42, which will co-host the AgriFoodTech Climate Summit at COP26 in Glasgow in November.

An employee preparing milk samples for testing

Wharf42 founder and event organiser Peter Wren-Hilton said that he hopes to attract 1,000 local and international delegates to the two-day Oceania Summit, which will take place in Auckland in April 2022.

It will feature regional and international keynote speakers, breakout panels, an exhibition showcasing current research being undertaken across the region, a startup hub with a pitch event to global investors, as well as networking opportunities.

He said: “If the borders are open, we’re hoping to attract delegates from around the world to come and share what is happening in this important space.”

Wren-Hilton added: “New Zealand is so strong in agrifood because our agriculture and horticulture sector is the backbone of our economy. In addition, the government in New Zealand is very committed to effecting resolution in climate change. The combination of these factors makes New Zealand the perfect destination for an event of this sort.

“There is great science being done by our universities and Crown Research Institutes. The objective is to provide farmers and growers with the tools they need to clean up the environment, address climate issues and reach net-zero emissions targets.”

The 2035 Oceania Summit event was launched during Fieldays 2021 in New Zealand, the Southern Hemisphere’s largest agricultural event.
Within 48 hours of the announcement, more than 250 people had registered their interest on the Summit’s landing page, a very positive indicator, Wren-Hilton shared.

The event has the support of Tourism New Zealand’s Business Events team, Auckland Unlimited, AgriTech New Zealand, and the Australian AgriTech Association.

Currently, Wren-Hilton is undertaking a roadshow around New Zealand to secure the involvement of other key players in the agrifood ecosystem.

Thailand extends lockdown, expands enhanced restrictions to more provinces

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Bangkok and 28 other high-risk zones will be placed under the strictest lockdown measures to curb Delta surge

Thailand will extend lockdown restrictions in Bangkok and 12 other dark-red zone provinces for another two weeks starting Tuesday (August 3), with 16 more provinces to come under the curbs, amid a Covid-19 surge.

Provinces marked as a dark-red zone are placed under the strictest of restrictions which includes a night curfew, a ban on dine-in services, and curbs on inter-provincial travel.

Bangkok and 28 other high-risk zones will be placed under the strictest lockdown measures to curb Delta surge

The restrictions will be ​evaluated after two weeks, said the Centre for Covid-19 Situation Administration (CCSA). If the situation does not improve, the restriction period may be extended until August 31, with more areas expected to be added.

The 16 provinces which have been added to the dark-red zone are: Kanchanaburi, Tak, Nakhon Nayok, Nakhon Ratchasima, Prachuap Khiri Khan, Prachin Buri, Phetchabun, Rayong, Ratchaburi, Lop Buri, Sing Buri, Samut Songkhram, Saraburi, Suphan Buri, Ang Thong and Phetchaburi.

With the new additions, a total of 29 areas in Thailand – or more than one-third of the country – will be under the tightest restrictions.

In the meantime, 37 provinces have been declared as red-zone or maximum controlled places, while 11 provinces are in orange or controlled areas.

Thailand has been listed as among the top 10 countries last week for recording the highest daily Covid-19 infections. On August 1, the country reported 18,027 infections and 133 deaths, bringing the cumulative total to 615,314 cases and 4,990 fatalities.

Due to the severity of the situation, Thai AirAsia has announced that it will temporarily suspend all business operations in Thailand until the end of August, but hopes to resume services in September.

Meanwhile, some hotel operators and travel companies in Phuket said that the ongoing semi-lockdown has taken a further toll on tourism businesses. They also claimed that the Phuket Sandbox programme has yielded no benefit for small operators as most returnees to the island are regular guests of big hotel chains.

Local media reported that more hotels have decided to pause operations amid the Covid surge.

Melbourne secures world’s largest psychology congress for 2028

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Melbourne CBD

Melbourne has been chosen as the host city for the International Congress of Psychology (ICP) 2028, the world’s largest gathering of psychologists from across the globe.

Held every four years, ICP 2028 will mark four decades since it has been held in Australasia and only for the second time in its 132-year history.

Melbourne CBD

It is anticipated ICP 2028 will welcome 5,000 international delegates to attend a six-day programme held at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre. The event has been projected to deliver in excess of A$39.2 million of economic contribution to the local economy.

ICP 2028 will provide the chance for delegates to exchange knowledge and foster excellence in standards for education, training, research and the applications of psychology and apply it to local settings in support of the Victorian Mental Health Workforce Strategy.

The bid was led by Melbourne Convention Bureau (MCB) in partnership with Australian Psychological Society (APS) and with support from the Victorian Government.

MCB’s chief executive, Julia Swanson said securing this event was “two years in the making”, and with this win, Melbourne is recognised for its long tradition of scientific exchange and collaboration across many fields of psychology internationally.

To win the event, MCB leveraged a suite of virtual and digital assets to connect with ICP key decision-makers in presenting Melbourne’s bid. The bureau also collaborated with local partner, Harry the hirer, who invested in remote filming capabilities was crucial to the video production achievements.

Florence Chua joins PCMA as MD APAC

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Florence Chua

PCMA has appointed Florence Chua as its managing director APAC, taking over from Karen Bolinger.

Based in Singapore, Chua will lead the APAC team to expand upon the momentum of region-specific events, thought leadership, community building, education and content.

Florence Chua

Chua has more than 20 years of experience working with corporations and associations throughout the APAC region, most recently as vice president, growth and brand management for Entrepreneurs’ Organisation.

Bolinger, who has been managing director APAC for PCMA since April 2020 on a part-time consultancy basis, will continue to support PCMA in a consulting capacity and handle specific projects.

Under Bolinger’s leadership PCMA’s brand expanded throughout the region, PCMA launched its inaugural Convening APAC and for the first time ever Convening Leaders was live from Singapore in 2021.

 

Tradeshow organisers welcome turning point for Singapore’s MICE industry

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high-rise buildings in Singapore pictured
  • Singapore’s pandemic exit could benefit year-end events
  • Safe meetings procedures are well in place; will inspire foreign attendees’ confidence
  • Asia’s fluctuating infections could handicap Singapore’s large-scale events recovery
MICE organisers in Singapore are optimistic about upcoming prospects as the city-state begins plans for an endemic phase; high-rise buildings in Singapore’s CBD pictured

Tradeshow and conference organisers in Singapore believe that easing of restrictions on business events and quarantine-free arrivals for vaccinated travellers, should these come into force once herd immunity is achieved in the coming month or so, could result in a livelier year-end calendar of events for the city-state.

Dylan Sharma, vice president, advocacy and communications with the Singapore Association for Conventions & Exhibitions Organisers and Suppliers (SACEOS), said the announcement was a “glimmer of light at the end of a long tunnel” for “an industry that has been severely impacted by the pandemic in the past one and a half year”.

“The easing of restrictions such as quarantine-free travel will come as a much-needed boost for the MICE and events industry, as it will provide a sense of certainty and sufficient runway for the planning of events,” commented Sharma. “More importantly, as a country that is heavily reliant on international participants, the government’s plan to allow a certain degree of normalcy while Covid remains in our midst will allow our industry to finally open up and attract foreign visitors.

Despite pandemic challenges that shut Singapore off to most international traffic, the country has been able to conduct some 90 business event pilots since August 2020, most of which were hybrids that saw overseas participation via the Internet. Such pilots include the 2020 IEEE International Conference on Computational Electromagnetics, the Asia Pacific MedTech Virtual Forum 2020, TravelRevive, and Geo Connect Asia 2021.

“Should this come to pass, it would be great news and a fillip for the MICE industry and Singapore,” agreed Edward Liu, managing director of Conference & Exhibition Management Services (CEMS). He added that quarantine-free travel would encourage regular foreign exhibitors and trade visitors to join the company’s tradeshows in person.

CEMS currently maintains a packed roster of tradeshows in Singapore over the months of October and November. They include Architecture & Building Services 2021, which comprises seven co-located exhibitions to present a comprehensive platform for all building needs for markets in South-east Asia.

“If the government could make the reopening pronouncements unequivocally, this would restore confidence in the economy both in Singapore and abroad. Businesses would be able to make firm decisions in sync with the government guidelines and policies. With their commitment to partake in our conferences and exhibitions, then it would be easier for us to persuade our international speakers and exhibitors to attend our events in-person,” added Liu.

Patricia Cheong, managing director Asia, of International Conference Services, told TTGmice that she is encouraged to “push forward with our plans for more in-person or hybrid events in the coming months”.

She said quarantine-free travel intentions are “spurring hope that regional, and maybe even global meetings and events, may be possible before the end of this year and paving the way for the return of larger-scale face-to-face events in Singapore”.

Cheong pointed out that compulsory quarantines have a direct impact on travel costs and time, discouraging companies from approving their staff’s in-person attendance at trade events in destinations with such requirements.

“This (in turn) impacted international attendance at events. Allowing quarantine-free travel for fully vaccinated participants means we can aim to return to live events with global participants as quickly as possible,” said Cheong.

Safety first
With an expanded in-person audience no longer a possibility reserved for the distant future, organisers here say that greater attention must be paid to participants’ health and safety.

Cheong said: “Nothing can replace the in-person greeting and serendipitous moments that face-to-face events allow – but we also need to demonstrate that we are meeting safely.

“Fortunately, Singapore has been demonstrating the ability to deliver safe events amid the pandemic and instilling confidence with business travellers. Coupled with the reopening of borders and quarantine-free travel options made available, we expect to see a rise in demand from international delegations to events here in Singapore.”

With foresight, SACEOS has been preparing for brighter days, launching the SG SafeEvent Certification on April 7. The “first-of-its-kind programme” aims to strengthen Singapore’s position as a leading global business events hub, explained Sharma.

Event companies with a risk management plan and that are able to uphold hygiene and safe distancing benchmarks in accordance with the Technical Reference 84 Safe event management for the MICE and events industry, developed by the Singapore Standards Council, will be able to display a mark of assurance.

“To date, 68 companies have registered for the SG SafeEvent Certification, and many more are beginning the certification journey to be an accredited SafeEvent Organiser, Venue or Supplier,” he detailed.

Cautious steps ahead
Tradeshow organisers acknowledged that the extent of Singapore’s border reopening will hinge on how well other countries are coping with Covid-19 infections as well as their rate of vaccination.

Even as Singapore achieves herd immunity and is able to manage local cases through frequent testing and quick tracing, Liu said continued high global infections will force the city-state government to limit the reach of its quarantine-free travel allowance.

Cheong made the same projection. “At this stage, the plan is to start reopening borders and to establish travel corridors with countries that have Covid-19 infections under control. Unfortunately, vaccination has been progressing quite sluggishly in Asia. This would mean that having participants from the region would continue to be challenging,” she said.

Asia’s ongoing struggle with new waves of Covid-19 infections also means Singapore is more likely to reopen to vaccinated travellers from Europe, the Middle East and the US – where governments have also resumed life and economic activities in a post-pandemic environment – and less likely to those in the South-east Asia neighbourhood.

For Kenny Yong, founder and group CEO of Fireworks Trade Media, this presents a challenging reality. He explained: “Many shows staged in Singapore are regional-led – they target mostly visitors from ASEAN member countries. (Singapore’s quarantine-free travel) will not address the problem of us not being able to reach out to ASEAN visitors, which are key to many tradeshows here.”

Furthermore, the uncertainty of Covid-19-related regulations continues to weigh heavily on Yong’s mind.

“Singapore has announced a more liberal opening of the country but we have all witnessed the fluidity of situations these past 18 months, with many decisions made at a short notice. These are unsettling and enough to give any bona fide organiser the jitters,” he said.

And should quarantine-free entry for vaccinated travellers kick off come September, trade events scheduled for 4Q2021 would have a very small window in August and September to promote and acquire international visitors, opined Yong, adding that the move is good but too late for the industry.

Sharma echoed the same concerns, but noted that industry players are determined “to not let Covid-19 get the better of us, and for us to continue what business events do best – bringing people and communities together”.

He added: “We are determined to stay the course, take all necessary precautions, and look forward with optimism.”

Meanwhile, Cheong is keeping an eye on Covid-19 test requirements for event attendees once larger shows are allowed to resume in an endemic Covid state.

“Cost of testing remains high, and will serve as a key consideration when organisations evaluate the overall cost of travel for their staff to attend events overseas,” she explained, adding that there is also an expectation that organisers should cover the cost of pre-event testing to encourage attendance.

Yong is less concerned about the cost of Covid-19 tests on arrival and at events, as the “hunger” among his overseas clients to resume business trips and engagements in person has led many of them to allocate test charges as part of essential travel expenses.

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