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Thailand’s Long-term Resident Visa/Heat soars to 43°C/Storm chaos in northeast/”Godzilla” El Niño looms/Rising heat is stretching summer/Songkran ‘Seven Dangerous Days’ ends/24-Hour Alcohol Sales in EEC/Famed Khao Yai tiger dies
- THE IRAN WAR: Strait of Hormuz won’t reopen/Global tourism on edge/US$760 million in oil bets/Oil-addicted Asia finally going green
- ECONOMY: US urges Thailand to remove barriers/ADB cuts Thailand growth view/Shrinking population trend/Thailand banks on EU trade deal/Driving e-commerce growth
- TOURISM: Bangkok’s biggest Songkran yet/Songkran a world-class festival draw/Thai Airways Cuts May Flights
- THAILAND EXPERIENCE: Songkran Festival in photos/Mon Songkran rite bathes monks/Elephant Nature Park Chiang Mai
- CLIMATE THAILAND: Ministers Push Eco Packaging/500kg of ‘ghost nets’
- INTERNATIONAL/HUA HIN TRANSPORT and LINKS
Thailand’s Long-term Resident Visa
Thailand has introduced a new visa called “Long-Term Resident (LTR) Visa”, which is a program that provides a range of tax and non-tax benefits to enhance the country’s attractiveness as a regional hub for living and doing business for ‘high-potential’ individuals. Today, Thailand is already home to multinational corporations from all over the world and one of the most important tourist destinations in Asia.
Thailand presents itself as a very attractive location for “work from anywhere” professionals. This new visa program is expected to attract new foreign residents, technologies, and talents contributing to domestic spending and investment, while supporting economic growth. The Thai government has set the target of attracting one million wealthy or talented foreign residents into the country over the next five years.

Thailand braces for summer storms as heat soars to 43°C
The Thai Meteorological Department has issued its seventh warning of the year, cautioning that summer storms will continue to affect upper Thailand through Monday, bringing thunderstorms, strong winds, hail, and isolated lightning strikes alongside extreme heat.
According to the announcement, the unstable weather will initially affect the northeast and the east before spreading to the central region, including Bangkok and surrounding areas, as well as the north. Continued …
Storm chaos in northeast – Surin blackout, Buriram roads blocked
Severe summer storms swept across Thailand’s northeast overnight, causing widespread disruption in Surin and Buriram, as heavy rain and powerful winds brought down infrastructure and blocked key transport routes.
In Surin, the storm struck late yesterday, unleashing torrential rain and violent gusts that toppled multiple high-voltage transmission poles along Highway 226 on the Surin–Sikhoraphum route. Continued …
Southeast Asia braces for scorching heat, water crisis as “Godzilla” El Niño looms
A potential “Godzilla” or super El Niño is forecast to develop in the second half of 2026, threatening Southeast Asia with prolonged drought, extreme heat, and heightened wildfire risk. While the term “Godzilla” is informal, scientists use it to describe an exceptionally strong El Niño event where sea surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific rise at least 2°C above average.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) estimates a 62% chance of El Niño emerging between June and August, with roughly a one-in-three chance it could become strong by October-December. Continued …
Rising heat is stretching summer and changing how people live
Climate change is leaving an increasingly visible mark on the planet, with temperatures continuing to rise year after year. The latest study shows that summer is now arriving earlier and lasting longer, with growing consequences for daily life, urban planning, and infrastructure.
Research from the University of British Columbia (UBC) found that between 1990 and 2023, summer length across the world’s mid-latitudes increased by an average of around six days per decade. That marks a notably faster rate of change than earlier research, which found that summer had lengthened by 4.8 days per decade before 2012. Continued …
Songkran ‘Seven Dangerous Days’ ends with fewer accidents, injuries, and deaths
The seven-day Songkran road safety campaign has concluded with a total of 1,242 accidents, 1,200 injuries, and 242 deaths nationwide, with 10 provinces reporting zero fatalities.
Overall figures for this year’s Songkran period showed marked improvement compared with the three-year average, Thiraphat Khatchamart, director-general of the Department of Disaster Prevention and Mitigation, who chairs the Road Safety Directing Center, said yesterday. Continued …
Thailand Proposes 24-Hour Alcohol Sales in EEC Zone
The Alcoholic Beverage Control Committee has approved in principle a proposal to allow 24-hour sales of beer and liquor in the Eastern Aviation City promotion zone, with a public hearing and royal decree required before implementation. The process is expected to be completed by no later than May.
Dr. Montien Kanasawat, director-general of the Department of Disease Control, said the committee also approved a draft announcement on prohibited alcohol sales days. Under the draft, major Buddhist holy days will remain no-sale days, but the legal authority will shift from a prime minister’s office announcement to one issued by the committee. Continued …
Famed Khao Yai tiger dies of natural causes
A male Indochinese tiger known as “Sri Kosa”, a key figure in Thailand’s wild tiger population, has died of natural causes in the Dong Phayayen-Khao Yai forest complex, researchers have confirmed.
The adult tiger, identified as TLT-119M in monitoring records, was first captured on camera traps in 2019 in Thap Lan and Pang Sida national parks. He was later fitted with a GPS collar in April last year to track his movements and study his behavior, and was subsequently given the name Sri Kosa. Continued …

Strait of Hormuz won’t reopen, Iranian leader tells Trump
President Donald Trump said the United States may allow the ceasefire deal with Iran to expire next week if no deal is reached to end the war by Wednesday. Despite that outlook, Trump said there was also “pretty good news” regarding Iran, but the president declined to elaborate as he spoke with reporters aboard Air Force One as he returned to Washington, DC, from Arizona.
Earlier yesterday, Iran said it scrapped reopening the Strait of Hormuz after Trump said he would not call off the American naval blockade of Iranian ports, despite the country’s concession to allow commercial traffic through the critical waterway. Continued …
Global tourism on edge: What happens next
The collapse of high-stakes peace talks in Pakistan has sent a chill through global markets, and what happens next is no longer just a geopolitical question. It is a tourism question.
Recent negotiations in Islamabad, aimed at stabilizing tensions linked to the Iran conflict, were always fragile. Analysts warned from the outset that Pakistan lacked the leverage to guarantee outcomes, with external forces capable of derailing progress at any moment. Continued …
Mystery trader dumped US$760 million in oil bets just before prices crashed
A massive oil trade placed moments before crude prices slumped has triggered fresh questions over whether sensitive information tied to the Iran conflict may have been used to profit in global energy markets.
The transaction, worth around US$760 million, was executed roughly 20 minutes before Iran’s foreign minister formally announced yesterday that commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz would remain open for the rest of the ceasefire period. Continued …
War forces oil-addicted Asia to finally go green
The age of cheap oil is over and Thailand’s rooftops are reflecting that fact. Across homes, garages, and warehouses in the sun-drenched kingdom, the blue-black sheen of solar panels is spreading, as the Iran war has done what years of climate summits could not: turn solar power into a necessity.
Demand for solar panels has swamped companies like Wayso, whose managing director is coloring in Thailand’s rooftops as fast as he can find technicians to do it. “We can’t hire quickly enough,” Suwat Cherdvut said. “We’ve had to start outsourcing technicians just to keep up.” Continued …

US urges Thailand to remove barriers on cars, drugs, and farm goods
Trade between Thailand and the United States surged past US$110 billion in 2025, underlining increasingly strong economic ties between the two countries. But behind the impressive figures lies a long list of trade barriers that Washington wants Bangkok to address in concrete terms.
Three issues are under especially close scrutiny: recognition of US automotive standards, approval of pharmaceuticals and medical devices, and wider access for American agricultural and food products. Continued …
ADB cuts Thailand growth view, flags deeper structural drag
Thailand’s economy is set to slow again in 2026, with the Asian Development Bank forecasting growth of just 1.8%, down from 2.4% in 2025, and 2.9% in 2024, before a modest recovery to 2.0% in 2027.
The sharper message in ADB’s latest outlook, however, is that the country’s deeper problem is not just this year’s external shocks. It is the structural weakness sitting underneath them: sluggish productivity, low domestic value added, and an economy that still struggles to spread technology and know-how widely enough to local firms. Continued …
Shrinking population trend has begun to impact the Thai economy
A People’s Party politician on Thursday warned that last year’s birth level in Thailand was the lowest in 75 years. Natthaya Boonphakdee warned that by 2036, one-third of all Thai people will be over 60 years of age as the country becomes a super-aged society.
At the same time, the country will have lost 2.5 million working people from its population. After that, the spiraling decline in both population and working-age adults poses serious economic challenges to the economy. Continued …
Thailand banks on EU trade deal
The international trade landscape is changing rapidly, with more barriers and the waning influence of certain established international organizations. In response, countries are reducing their reliance on multilateral systems and strengthening economic stability through bilateral and regional free-trade agreements (FTAs).
How do FTAs shape Thailand’s trade and economy, and which sectors could face heightened risks, especially following the EU’s finalization of its FTA with India? Continued …
Thailand driving e-commerce growth
Thailand has emerged as Southeast Asia’s e-commerce growth engine amid regional market share consolidation. The country has become the standout performer in Southeast Asia’s e-commerce landscape, posting the region’s fastest growth and reinforcing its position as a key battleground for platform dominance, according to a new report released by Singapore-based research firm Momentum Works.
In 2025, Thailand’s e-commerce market surged 51.8% year-on-year to US$35.5 billion in gross merchandise value (GMV), significantly outpacing regional peers and signaling a structural acceleration in digital consumption. Continued …

The morning after Bangkok’s biggest Songkran yet
The Tourism Authority of Thailand projected 30.3 billion baht in Songkran revenue this year, up 6% from 2025, and released the number with the kind of confidence that comes from having done the work. The production at Benchakitti Park, the coordinated Silom closure, the S2O headliners on Ratchadaphisek, the international press coverage – none of it was accidental.
Bangkok did not stumble into becoming one of the world’s most-watched festival destinations. It applied for the job and this year the application was approved at scale. Continued …
Bangkok moves to make Songkran a world-class festival draw
Bangkok Gov. Chadchart Sittipunt has unveiled an ambitious vision to transform the city’s Songkran festival into a world-class event, with a strong focus on upgrading infrastructure, improving public space management, and strengthening environmental measures.
Thai Songkran already attracts huge numbers of visitors. On Silom Road alone, more than 700,000 people joined the festivities, with the Bangkok Metropolitan Administration (BMA) able to manage the area safely and in an orderly manner. Continued …
Thai Airways International Cuts May Flights Across Asia and Europe
Thai Airways International (THAI) will reduce flight frequencies across domestic and international routes in May, citing sharply higher fuel costs and weaker passenger demand during the low season. The cuts affect services within Thailand as well as routes to Asia and Europe, with some routes suspended entirely.
Ticket agents have been notified and the airline said it has prepared options to help agents and passengers manage the changes. The adjustments will run throughout May, with domestic services to Khon Kaen reduced from four to three flights per day, Udon Thani from three to two, and Ubon Ratchathani from 14 flights per week to 12 between May 5-28. Continued …

Songkran Festival in photos
Songkran, Thailand’s traditional New Year festival, began on April 13 and ran through April 15. The celebrations featuring participants being doused with water drew unusually large crowds in Bangkok this year, with a record 160,000 people gathering on Silom Road on the first day, up from 100,000 last year.
The jump in attendance is partly due to rising fuel prices. Higher gasoline and diesel costs discouraged many Bangkok residents from traveling to their hometown, leading them to stay in the capital instead. As a result, the city’s festivities became even more crowded despite the economic strain. Photos …
Mon Songkran rite bathes monks through bamboo channels
A rare Songkran tradition unique to Sangkhlaburi drew Mon worshippers, local residents, and tourists to Wat Wang Wiwekaram in Kanchanaburi yesterday, despite stifling heat and a lingering haze of dust and smoke.
The ceremony took place at the Bodhgaya Chedi in Ban Wangka, where devotees gathered to take part in the annual ritual of bathing monks with scented water flowing through a handmade network of bamboo channels. Continued …
Elephant Nature Park Chiang Mai: Ethical Elephant Sanctuary Guide
Elephant Nature Park serves as a sprawling 250-acre rescue center located 60 kilometers north of Chiang Mai in Thailand’s lush Mae Taeng Valley. Visitors arrive via a scenic shuttle from the city, greeted by the sounds of trumpeting elephants and the scent of tropical foliage amid misty mountains.
This sanctuary fits into Thailand’s growing ethical tourism movement, offering day visits, overnight stays, and volunteer programs that prioritize animal welfare over entertainment. The atmosphere buzzes with gentle energy: rescued elephants roam freely in grassy fields, mud wallows sparkle under the sun, and bamboo platforms provide shaded viewing areas where the air carries hints of lemongrass and earth. Continued …

Ministers Push Eco Packaging Plan in Thailand
Thailand’s Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Commerce Supachai Suthamphan and Industry Minister Warawut Silpa-archa have led efforts to promote eco-friendly packaging to reduce plastic use, as global supply pressures linked to the Middle East crisis impact costs.
The move was discussed on Thursday at Government House Building 1, where both ministers met senior officials from the Ministry of Commerce and Ministry of Industry. Talks focused on managing production cost fluctuations and promoting sustainable resource use amid ongoing volatility in global raw material markets. Continued …
Divers clear 500kg of ‘ghost nets’ from around Payang Island
Similan Islands National Park officials successfully removed a massive 500 kilograms of discarded fishing gear, commonly known as “ghost nets,” during a routine Marine Smart Patrol near Payang Island.
The operation, which took place yesterday, was part of an ongoing effort to safeguard the Andaman Sea’s fragile ecosystem and restore the pristine condition of one of Thailand’s most renowned marine sanctuaries. Continued …

How tumor freezing is changing breast cancer treatment
Doctors are exploring a different approach to a specific type of breast cancer tumor called cryoablation. It destroys the cancer with extreme cold in a short outpatient procedure that can let them go home the same day. Video …
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