
The European Commission’s Directorate-General for Mobility and Transport confirmed on 23 January 2026 that Commissioner Apostolos Tzitzikostas will host European Tourism Day in Brussels on 26 January. The high-level event will feed directly into a forthcoming EU Strategy for Sustainable Tourism, covering themes such as decarbonisation, accessibility, artificial intelligence and private investment.
For Ireland—where tourism contributes about 4 per cent of GDP and supports one in ten jobs—the strategy’s direction will influence everything from aviation slot allocation at Dublin Airport to funding for green-destination initiatives along the Wild Atlantic Way. The Commission is expected to push for expanded rail connectivity and stricter emissions reporting for short-haul flights, measures that could raise costs for carriers on Irish routes while accelerating investment in low-carbon aircraft and sustainable aviation fuel.
On the outbound side, corporate travel managers in multinationals headquartered in Ireland may soon face EU-wide reporting obligations for business-trip emissions, dovetailing with CSRD disclosure rules. Digital-identity proposals, including EU Travel Credentials tested in France and the Netherlands, are also on the agenda and could streamline border crossings for EU citizens, including Irish passport holders.
For travellers and firms needing to keep pace with shifting entry regulations, VisaHQ can be a time-saving resource. The company’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers real-time guidance on visa requirements worldwide and manages the entire application workflow online—an increasingly valuable service as EU policy reforms ripple through global mobility rules.
Irish stakeholders—from Fáilte Ireland to ITIC and large tour operators—can still request virtual attendance at the livestreamed sessions. The final strategy paper is due in Q4 2026; once adopted it will shape EU funding calls under programmes such as InvestEU and Horizon Europe.
Companies engaged in mobility should monitor the debate closely: green-criteria look set to become embedded in public-sector travel procurement and might influence corporate CSR benchmarks used in relocation policies.
For Ireland—where tourism contributes about 4 per cent of GDP and supports one in ten jobs—the strategy’s direction will influence everything from aviation slot allocation at Dublin Airport to funding for green-destination initiatives along the Wild Atlantic Way. The Commission is expected to push for expanded rail connectivity and stricter emissions reporting for short-haul flights, measures that could raise costs for carriers on Irish routes while accelerating investment in low-carbon aircraft and sustainable aviation fuel.
On the outbound side, corporate travel managers in multinationals headquartered in Ireland may soon face EU-wide reporting obligations for business-trip emissions, dovetailing with CSRD disclosure rules. Digital-identity proposals, including EU Travel Credentials tested in France and the Netherlands, are also on the agenda and could streamline border crossings for EU citizens, including Irish passport holders.
For travellers and firms needing to keep pace with shifting entry regulations, VisaHQ can be a time-saving resource. The company’s Ireland portal (https://www.visahq.com/ireland/) offers real-time guidance on visa requirements worldwide and manages the entire application workflow online—an increasingly valuable service as EU policy reforms ripple through global mobility rules.
Irish stakeholders—from Fáilte Ireland to ITIC and large tour operators—can still request virtual attendance at the livestreamed sessions. The final strategy paper is due in Q4 2026; once adopted it will shape EU funding calls under programmes such as InvestEU and Horizon Europe.
Companies engaged in mobility should monitor the debate closely: green-criteria look set to become embedded in public-sector travel procurement and might influence corporate CSR benchmarks used in relocation policies.









