Page 35 - GEORptFeb22
P. 35
entered the country by air in May. Land borders were opened as of June 1, which was broadly seen as highly encouraging, but the share of 70% visitors coming in across land borders might again overstate the impact in terms of tourism revenues.
According to an estimate by Galt & Taggart, Georgia will receive $1.2bn from tourism this year—still a major plunge from the €3.3bn in 2019.
"Opening the land borders from June 1 will facilitate the gradual recovery of tourism. Prior to the pandemic, in 2019, 70% of the total tourism flow was coming by land. We expect that in 2021, Georgia will receive $ 1.2 billion from tourism, which is 36% of 2019 tourism revenue,” the investment bank said.
Last year, Georgia lost tourism revenues of $2.7bn, as revenues from international tourism dropped to $542mn compared to $3.27bn in 2019.
It is also noteworthy that Galt & Taggart has raised its 2021 economic growth forecast for Georgia to 7%.
According to its previous forecast, the country’s economy was set to grow by 5% this year, but after Geostat published its report on 44.8% growth in April, Galt & Taggart raised its growth expectations.
7.1 cryptocurrency
Georgia’s mountainous cryptocurrency problem
Just ahead of the new year, residents of Georgia’s remote mountain region of Svaneti gathered in a church to make a solemn oath upon an icon of St George: that they would not mine cryptocurrency.
“It is unfortunate that we had to resort to this extreme measure, but we have been left with no other option,” one local told RFE/RL following the ceremony. It was a desperate attempt to deal with what has become an intractable problem: chronic energy shortages in Svaneti due to unscrupulous use of power-hungry computers mining cryptocurrency.
A few days earlier, the electricity utility company Energo Pro warned that the situation was “untenable.” Overuse had led to a spate of accidents on transmission lines that feed power to Svaneti, forcing the companies to send crews via helicopter to the high-altitude region, in harsh winter conditions, to fix them.
“No infrastructure can handle the kind of stress that we are seeing there,” the
35 GEORGIA Country Report February 2022 www.intellinews.com