European travel companies have reported a major drop in travel in the wake of the Paris attacks and the subsequent lockdown in Brussels.

Valencia, Spain-based travel data analyst ForwardKeys reported a “159% drop” in flight bookings to Brussels since the start of last weekend.

“If bookings are 100% down that indicates that no net bookings were made. 159% down means that in addition to no bookings being made, there were cancellations equal to 59% of the number of bookings made on the equivalent day last year,” ForwardKeys CEO Olivier Jager explained.

On a positive note, ForwardKeys’ analysis of forward air bookings showed that business travel bookings for the weeks of Dec. 7 and 14 are running well ahead of last year, suggesting that a significant proportion of business trips to Brussels have likely been postponed rather than canceled outright.

Meanwhile, British travel company Thomas Cook told the Guardian that the company had a drop in bookings from France and other European source markets after the Paris attacks.

“There is an unprecedented level of disruption. In my 30 years in the industry I have never seen anything like it,” Thomas Cook CEO Peter Fankhauser said.

Nevertheless, Fankhauser said that he was hopeful that business would rebound fairly quickly.

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