Posts

Sands of Ambition: The Tourism Renaissance in the Gulf and Egypt

Sands of Ambition: The Tourism Renaissance in the Gulf and Egypt Where Time Bends Between Dune and Dome For centuries, the lands stretching from the Nile Delta to the Persian Gulf were framed through the lens of myth and mystery—places whispered about in ancient texts, traversed by caravans and pilgrims, and guarded by deserts that swallowed time itself. To the outside world, they were either sacred or sealed: Egypt, keeper of pharaohs’ tombs; Saudi Arabia, guardian of Islam’s holiest sites; the pearling sheikhdoms of the Gulf, soon to be reborn as glass-and-steel marvels. Back then, tourism was not a strategy—it was an afterthought, if considered at all. But history has a way of accelerating. In just three decades, a quiet revolution has unfolded across this sun-scorched arc of civilization. Governments once reliant on oil revenues began asking a daring question: What if our greatest asset isn’t beneath the sand—but above it? The answer has reshaped skylines, revived forgotten o...

The Grand European Tour from the Desk

The Grand European Tour from the Desk   For centuries the Grand Tour was a rite of passage for the privileged few: young British aristocrats hauling trunks of Shakespeare and Byron across the Alps to be dazzled by Rome, ruined by Venice, and quietly improved by Paris. It ended with the steamship, the package holiday, and the €29.99 Ryanair flight. Or so we thought. Between 1990 and 2024 something far more dramatic happened. Europe’s eight great tourism nations (France, Spain, Italy, Germany, the United Kingdom, Greece, Portugal, and the Netherlands) turned the entire continent into the world’s most fiercely contested stage. This was no longer a leisurely education for the elite; it became a sophisticated, multibillion-euro competition for every passport holder on earth. In 1990 these eight countries welcomed roughly 160 million international arrivals combined. By 2023 the figure had exploded to nearly 423 million, and the total economic impact now exceeds €2 trillion annually...