Examples of Tourism project in a sentence
The Department of Tourism project staff will require training in the management of safeguards issues.
IFC is also preparing a Tourism project (SEATIP) which is based largely on the work developed under this project.
The Malin Head Marine Tourism project works include the building of passing places along the narrow roads leadingto the headland.
Updates made to this table during the October 2007 revision of this plan show the training aspects already covered by the EU Tourism project, the training already provided (by OPAAL, the TCMP or others), and training aspects covered (either fully or partially) in the Sustainable Livelihoods subproject (see Section 16.2), marked ‘OPAAL – SL project’.
The Malin Head Marine Tourism project was formally opened by Cathaoirleach Cllr Ciaran Brogan on Tuesday, June 16, 2015.
Gwynedd Council’s stated purpose in pursuing the Benefitting from Tourism project is to: ‘To reinforce Gwynedd's status as a sustainable destination of international repute and implement the best option to ensure that Gwynedd's residents and businesses benefit from the tourists that visit the county.’ This report is therefore part of a review which seeks to identify possible models of the way visitors can contribute more directly towards the tourism sector.
Within the Weaving the Recovery – Indigenous Women in Tourism project, UNWTO and partners will create a training toolkit on empowering indigenous women and their communities, through cultural transmission, responsible tourism and fair trade, following the testing phase in a pilot country.
The State Department of Tourism project staff will require training in the management of safeguards issues.
It was agreed to recommend that the Council grants delegated authority to a future meeting of the Development Committee to agree the Economic Appraisal of Hillsborough Tourism project in order that the Department of Agriculture and Rural Development (DARD) funding deadlines could be achieved.
The lending pipeline includes operations that benefit women directly (e.g., the Adolescent Girls initiative in Nepal and Afghanistan); and indirectly (e.g., rural development and tourism as seen in the Punjab Tourism project in Pakistan).