Agi: Turismo in crisi in Medio Oriente: perdite per 600 milioni di dollari al giorno

AGI - La guerra in Medio Oriente sta costando all'industria turistica della regione 600 milioni di dollari al giorno in termini di mancati introiti. È la stima del World Travel & Tourism Council, riportata dal Financial Times. Le cancellazioni dei voli, la chiusura dello spazio aereo e il crescente malessere tra i potenziali viaggiatori stanno di fatto danneggiando l'economia turistica della regione. A parte le mancate visite, i viaggiatori si sono affrettati a cancellare le vacanze in Medio Oriente che avevano pianificato in precedenza allo scoppio del conflitto. Secondo i dati raccolti dal gruppo AirDNA, nella sola Dubai sono state cancellate più di 80.000 prenotazioni di affitti a breve termine nella settimana fino al 6 marzo.
Prima dell'attacco, il World Travel & Tourism Council aveva stimato che quest'anno i visitatori internazionali avrebbero speso circa 207 miliardi di dollari in Medio Oriente. I grandi hub regionali come Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha e Bahrein gestiscono in genere più di mezzo milione di passeggeri aerei al giorno, ma secondo il fornitore di dati Cirium, i cinque giorni di cancellazioni dei voli in tutta la regione hanno lasciato a terra circa 4 milioni di viaggiatori la scorsa settimana. Centinaia di voli sono decollati dagli aeroporti del Medio Oriente la scorsa settimana nel tentativo di riportare a casa le decine di migliaia di turisti ancora bloccati.
Prospettive future per il turismo
Le destinazioni del Medio Oriente si sono già riprese in passato da episodi di conflitto. Ma nel frattempo, fino a quando non verrà trovata una soluzione, il turismo resterà fermo. Alcuni analisti prevedono una ripresa ma solo dei viaggi d'affari grazie alla posizione strategica della regione tra Europa e Asia. Altri sono più ottimisti e sono sicuri che appena i raid termineranno, i visitatori torneranno a viaggiare nella regione.

Tourism in crisis in the Middle East: losses of $600 million per day.

AGI - The war in the Middle East is costing the region’s tourism industry $600 million a day in lost revenue. This is the estimate of the World Travel & Tourism Council, reported by the Financial Times. Cancellations of flights, the closure of airspace, and the growing unease among potential travelers are effectively damaging the region’s tourism economy. In addition to missed visits, travelers have rushed to cancel vacations they had previously planned in the Middle East in the wake of the conflict. According to data collected by AirDNA, more than 80,000 short-term rental bookings were canceled in Dubai alone in the week leading up to March 6th.

Before the attack, the World Travel & Tourism Council had estimated that this year international visitors would spend around $207 billion in the Middle East. Major regional hubs such as Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Doha, and Bahrain typically handle more than half a million passengers a day, but according to data provider Cirium, the five days of flight cancellations across the region have left approximately 4 million travelers grounded last week. Hundreds of flights took off from Middle Eastern airports last week in an attempt to bring home tens of thousands of tourists still stranded.

Future Prospects for Tourism

Middle Eastern destinations have recovered from conflict episodes in the past. But in the meantime, until a solution is found, tourism will remain stalled. Some analysts predict a recovery, but only through business travel due to the region’s strategic location between Europe and Asia. Others are more optimistic and are confident that once the hostilities end, visitors will return to travel in the region.

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https://www.agi.it/economia/news/2026-03-11/iran-turismo-medio-oriente-perdite-600-mln-dollari-al-giorno-36057130/

#ContentTypeService #AirDNA In Europe, the Allure of Summer Travel Keeps Dimming http://is.gd/rrHarJ

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https://www.reddit.com/r/SideProject/comments/1oudjhy/airdna_50_off_discount_code/

Ah, because who *hasn't* wanted to #CSI their #living #room with air DNA? 🕵️‍♂️🔬 Clearly, the biggest threat to indoor privacy isn't hackers, but dust bunnies holding your genetic secrets. 😂
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-46151-7 #AirDNA #DustBunnies #IndoorPrivacy #GenomicSecrets #HackerNews #ngated
The invisible witness: air and dust as DNA evidence of human occupancy in indoor premises - Scientific Reports

Humans constantly shed deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) into the surrounding environment. This DNA may either remain suspended in the air or it settles onto surfaces as indoor dust. In this study, we explored the potential use of human DNA recovered from air and dust to investigate crimes where there are no visible traces available—for example, from a recently vacated drugs factory where multiple workers had been present. Samples were collected from three indoor locations (offices, meeting rooms and laboratories) characterized by different occupancy types and cleaning regimes. The resultant DNA profiles were compared with the reference profiles of 55 occupants of the premises. Our findings showed that indoor dust samples are rich sources of DNA and provide an historical record of occupants within the specific locality of collection. Detectable levels of DNA were also observed in air and dust samples from ultra-clean forensic laboratories which can potentially contaminate casework samples. We provide a Bayesian statistical model to estimate the minimum number of dust samples needed to detect all inhabitants of a location. The results of this study suggest that air and dust could become novel sources of DNA evidence to identify current and past occupants of a crime scene.

Nature

Extracting DNA from the air – DNA evidence of human occupancy in indoor premises

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-023-46151-7

#HackerNews #ExtractingDNA #AirDNA #HumanOccupancy #IndoorResearch #GeneticEvidence

The invisible witness: air and dust as DNA evidence of human occupancy in indoor premises - Scientific Reports

Humans constantly shed deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) into the surrounding environment. This DNA may either remain suspended in the air or it settles onto surfaces as indoor dust. In this study, we explored the potential use of human DNA recovered from air and dust to investigate crimes where there are no visible traces available—for example, from a recently vacated drugs factory where multiple workers had been present. Samples were collected from three indoor locations (offices, meeting rooms and laboratories) characterized by different occupancy types and cleaning regimes. The resultant DNA profiles were compared with the reference profiles of 55 occupants of the premises. Our findings showed that indoor dust samples are rich sources of DNA and provide an historical record of occupants within the specific locality of collection. Detectable levels of DNA were also observed in air and dust samples from ultra-clean forensic laboratories which can potentially contaminate casework samples. We provide a Bayesian statistical model to estimate the minimum number of dust samples needed to detect all inhabitants of a location. The results of this study suggest that air and dust could become novel sources of DNA evidence to identify current and past occupants of a crime scene.

Nature
Enhancing Vacation Rental Investment Decisions with AirDNA's Latest Tool

Aspiring investors seeking to secure a second home for vacation rental purposes often find themselves faced with the daunting task of ensuri...

The HostRooster Tech And Hospitality Blog

Expert: Airbnb downturn might help South Florida home market :

Local real estate experts say they are certain of one thing: South Florida is going to be fine even if short-term lease owners decide to move on.
#AirDNA #Airbnb #Alltherooms #FloridaAtlanticUniversity #housingmarket #KenJohnson #LongsteadatCorcoranGroup #Miami #Newsweek #NickGerli #NoaFigari #PropertyValues #realestate #rental

https://kbindependent.org/2023/07/03/expert-airbnb-downturn-might-help-south-florida-home-market/

Expert: Airbnb downturn might help South Florida home market

Local real estate experts say they are certain of one thing: South Florida is going to be fine even if short-term lease owners decide to move on.