Sunday, February 25
Educational Travel Boom
Península de Maraú- 'Home, (tropical) sweet home', Bahia. 70's-80's F//20's C: Does outdoor living get any better?
Travel as educational experience......
"Abercrombie & Kent runs educational tours for Harvard and other universities, but has also seen growth in non-university sponsored tours that it markets directly to the public. It recently announced a series of educational trips done in conjunction with The Nature Conservancy. The trips aren't necessarily for those on a budget: Abercrombie's 13-day trip to Brazil with The Nature Conservancy costs $7,840....."
courant.com | Educational Tourism A Booming Industry
Saturday, February 10
Record $845 M Tourism Budget
BRASILIA, Brazil:
On the eve of Carnival, Brazil's Tourism Ministry announced a record US$845 million (€654 million) budget for an annual campaign to attract more visitors to Latin America's largest country.
The budget "is the biggest in the history of tourism in the country," Minister Walfrido dos Mares Guia said on the ministry's Web site.
Brazil expects to gain US$9 billion to US$10 billion (€7 billion to €7.7 billion) in tourism revenue by 2010, Mares Guia said.
Brazil last year received US$4.3 million (€3.3 billion) from tourism, an 11.7 percent increase from 2005, according to Central Bank figures quoted by the ministry.
Brazil, home to major tourist attractions including Rio de Janeiro and Igaucu Falls, drew 5.4 million foreign visitors in 2005 — only 1.2 percent of the 808 million international visits registered that year around the world, the ministry said.
On the eve of Carnival, Brazil's Tourism Ministry announced a record US$845 million (€654 million) budget for an annual campaign to attract more visitors to Latin America's largest country.
The budget "is the biggest in the history of tourism in the country," Minister Walfrido dos Mares Guia said on the ministry's Web site.
Brazil expects to gain US$9 billion to US$10 billion (€7 billion to €7.7 billion) in tourism revenue by 2010, Mares Guia said.
Brazil last year received US$4.3 million (€3.3 billion) from tourism, an 11.7 percent increase from 2005, according to Central Bank figures quoted by the ministry.
Brazil, home to major tourist attractions including Rio de Janeiro and Igaucu Falls, drew 5.4 million foreign visitors in 2005 — only 1.2 percent of the 808 million international visits registered that year around the world, the ministry said.
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