Global Travel Leaders Formalise Cross-Sector Coordination Through the Global Resilience Network

As geopolitical fragmentation, AI acceleration and infrastructure pressure reshape global mobility, senior leaders across travel, finance, technology and government are consolidating strategic engagement through the Global Resilience Network (GRN).
The Network, now operating across Europe, Asia, the Middle East and the Americas, is strengthening executive-level coordination at a time when industry leaders are questioning whether traditional forums alone can deliver the coherence required for the next phase of global travel growth.

This renewed emphasis on structural resilience, reflected in recent global industry discussions, including the observance of UN Global Tourism Resilience Day on 17 February, underscores the growing recognition that preparedness must be matched by coordinated action across sectors.
While dialogue across the sector has increased, industry stakeholders acknowledge that volume of conversation has not necessarily translated into alignment or actionable coordination. GRN has been structured as a curated, cross-sector convergence platform designed specifically to address that gap.

Rather than functioning as a conference organiser or membership association, the Network is positioned as a selective, invitation-led leadership infrastructure, convening decision-makers whose collective influence shapes global mobility, including aviation, hospitality, destinations, financial services, infrastructure, energy, technology and investment.
The initiative builds on more than a decade of structured engagement with senior industry figures, reflecting consistent demand for more focused, outcome-driven formats that move beyond representation toward responsibility.

The Network has a distinguished panel of international experts drawn from government, tourism, technology and destination development, names include; Ghada Shalaby, former Deputy Minister of Tourism, Arab Republic of Egypt; Egyptian Hotel Association, Christian Mantei, President, Phase 3 Conseil formerly with Montefiore Investment, ATOUT France, IGESA and ATREAM, Alex MacEwan, International Investment and Strategy Advisor; Head of Investment Companies, Capital Access Group, Paras Loomba, CEO and Founder, GHE (Global Himalayan Expeditions), Claude Blanc, Sr. Advisor, travel and tourism; formerly Amadeus, RXGlobal and Rajan Datar, Host and Journalist, BBC.

Laurie Myers, Founding Strategist commented “The global system is not suffering from a lack of dialogue; it is suffering from a lack of coherence. Travel does not operate in isolation; it is shaped by financial systems, infrastructure decisions, technological platforms and geopolitical realities. GRN exists to enable alignment between those with the authority and capacity to shape outcomes.”
The Network reflects a growing recognition that resilience is systemic, not sector specific. In an era where fragmentation has become the default condition, coherence is emerging as the new leadership imperative, and GRN exists to help enable it. https://www.breakingtravelnews.com/news/article/global-travel-leaders-formalise-cross-sector-coordination-through-the-globa/

Angola aims to position tourism as a driver of sustainable development

At the opening press conference of ITB Berlin 2026, Márcio de Jesus Lopes Daniel, Minister of Tourism of the Republic of Angola, highlighted the role of host country and welcomed the international media and industry representatives.

The minister thanked ITB Berlin, Messe Berlin and the city of Berlin for their partnership and praised Germany as an important partner. Angola’s participation as host country at the 60th edition underlined the country’s growing international role in the dialogue on worldwide tourism, he said.

He highlighted tourism as a key element of Angola’s economic diversification – with the aim of creating long-term and stable added value beyond the oil sector. Sustainability was at the heart of the country’s tourism strategy: economic resilience, social inclusion and ecological responsibility were integral parts of the direction development was taking, he said.

With regard to Angola’s young population, the minister described the country’s demographic situation as a huge asset. Tourism offered good employment prospects – including in the hotel industry, culture, service sectors and creative industries. There was a particular focus on training, entrepreneurship and community-based tourism models designed to promote local added value, he said.

Under the heading ’The Rhythm of Life’, the minister presented Angola’s brand of tourism. Culture, music and dance, diverse natural beauty and vibrant communities were what made up the country. Angola was positioning itself as an authentic, culturally rich and hitherto undeveloped destination with great potential.

Summarising, the minister invited visitors to get to know Angola better at ITB Berlin and beyond, and called for partnerships, investment and deeper international dialogue to jointly advance the development of the tourism sector.

https://www.breakingtravelnews.com/news/article/angola-aims-to-position-tourism-as-a-driver-of-sustainable-development/