KFC to open its first restaurant in Tibet
Beijing: US fast-food giant Kentucky Fried Chicken will open its first chain store in Tibet's capital Lhasa next year as China gave a rare access to an American business firm in the closely guarded Himalayan region, where foreigners need special permission to visit.
Kentucky Fried Chicken (KFC) signed a contract with a shopping mall in downtown Lhasa, capital of the region, to open the first restaurant in Tibet by the end of January 2016, Chen Biao, a manager with the Lhasa Shenlishidai shopping centre was quoted as saying by the state-run Xinhua news agency.
The KFC restaurant in Lhasa, which is under decoration now, is designed to cover 540 square metres including two stories. KFC plans to build a 4.67-hectare frozen storage area in the suburbs of Lhasa to prepare for further expansion in the region.
"Before KFC chose to enter Tibet, we already had some fast food restaurants such as Dicos. The consumers in Tibet accept fried chicken and hamburgers well," Chen said.
Dicos is a Chinese fast food restaurant. There are hardly any foreign business in Tibet.
The permission for KFC came as Tibet witnessed a big surge of tourists mainly from China. In recent years there is a steady increase in foreign tourists as slowly opened the roof of the world after considerable improvement of infrastructure, which included rail, road and air connectivity to the remote regions of the Tibetan plateau.
The new KFC will also serve tourists in the city, which is a world-renowned destination, Chen said.
Tourists to Tibet's provincial capital Lhasa exceeded 10 million in the first 10 months of 2015, local government officials said.
A record of 11.59 million people from both home and abroad visited the city from January to October, up 11.71 per cent year on year.
The city's tourism sector earned 15 billion yuan (about USD 2.34 billion) in tourism revenue, up 38.16 per cent from last year. Overseas tourists reached 106,400, up 11.71 per cent from last year. Tourism is a pillar industry in Tibet, with revenue accounting for about one fifth of the region's GDP.
The region aims to attract 17 million tourists this year.
China also wants to show case development in Tibet whose gross domestic product (GDP) hit 92.5 billion yuan (USD14.5 billion) in 2014, maintaining its double-digit growth since 1994, official media said.
The per capita net income of farmers and herdsmen in the region hit 7,471 yuan in 2014, up 14 per cent year on year.
The per capita disposable income of urban residents also increased 8 per cent year on year to reach 22,026 yuan. Aside from rapid economic growth, market potential and a sound investment environment have made Tibet increasingly attractive to overseas investors, it said.