
Holding the rotating EU Council presidency, Cyprus hosted an informal meeting of tourism ministers at the Filoxenia Centre in Lefkosia on 17 April. Chaired by Deputy Tourism Minister Kostas Koumi, the session reached consensus on pillars that will feed into the first-ever EU Strategy for Sustainable Tourism expected later this quarter. Delegates agreed that the sector—representing roughly 10 % of EU GDP—must embed crisis-response mechanisms learned from the pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the current Middle-East upheaval.
As stakeholders adapt to these shifting travel regulations, VisaHQ can simplify one critical piece of the puzzle: securing the right travel documents. Through its Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), the company guides both leisure and corporate travelers through Schengen visa applications, keeps them abreast of new digital credentials, and offers real-time compliance support—helping businesses stay mobile while meeting the EU’s evolving sustainability benchmarks.
Key themes included ‘sustainable connectivity’, a push for multimodal rail-air packages, and an SME support toolbox covering digital skills, AI adoption and green-finance access. Cyprus used the platform to showcase its own initiatives: upgrading Larnaca and Paphos airports to accommodate e-gates compatible with the incoming Schengen Entry/Exit System, piloting a national tourism-data space and offering tax credits for low-season MICE events. These moves, Koumi argued, position the island as a ‘living lab’ for year-round, high-yield tourism—which in turn supports corporate mobility and expatriate retention. Council conclusions are slated for 28 May; if adopted, they will steer Commission funding and legislation through 2030. For business-travel teams the likely outcome is stricter ESG criteria for suppliers, but also more coherent EU-wide standards on crisis refund rules and digital travel credentials. UN Tourism’s Secretary-General, speaking via video link, praised Cyprus for “re-centring the sustainability conversation on travellers and host communities alike,” a nod to the presidency’s slogan “An Autonomous Union.”
As stakeholders adapt to these shifting travel regulations, VisaHQ can simplify one critical piece of the puzzle: securing the right travel documents. Through its Cyprus portal (https://www.visahq.com/cyprus/), the company guides both leisure and corporate travelers through Schengen visa applications, keeps them abreast of new digital credentials, and offers real-time compliance support—helping businesses stay mobile while meeting the EU’s evolving sustainability benchmarks.
Key themes included ‘sustainable connectivity’, a push for multimodal rail-air packages, and an SME support toolbox covering digital skills, AI adoption and green-finance access. Cyprus used the platform to showcase its own initiatives: upgrading Larnaca and Paphos airports to accommodate e-gates compatible with the incoming Schengen Entry/Exit System, piloting a national tourism-data space and offering tax credits for low-season MICE events. These moves, Koumi argued, position the island as a ‘living lab’ for year-round, high-yield tourism—which in turn supports corporate mobility and expatriate retention. Council conclusions are slated for 28 May; if adopted, they will steer Commission funding and legislation through 2030. For business-travel teams the likely outcome is stricter ESG criteria for suppliers, but also more coherent EU-wide standards on crisis refund rules and digital travel credentials. UN Tourism’s Secretary-General, speaking via video link, praised Cyprus for “re-centring the sustainability conversation on travellers and host communities alike,” a nod to the presidency’s slogan “An Autonomous Union.”