资讯

As some of Iceland’s most famous destinations deal with increasing visitor numbers, travellers are seeking quieter, ...
As war, terrorism and uncertainty pervade the globe, travelers are flocking to Iceland -- regarded as one of the safest nations on the planet. Fishing used to be the country’s most profitable ...
Tourism is undergoing an unprecedented downturn all over the world, but several factors make Iceland particularly vulnerable to the industry’s crash: geographic isolation, a small domestic ...
Iceland's spectacular landscape has played host to a tourism boom in recent years. The number of foreign visitors touching down in the country increased by nearly 16% last year alone.
People in Iceland have lived off fishing for centuries, and in the past decade aluminum production has grown in the economy. Both are now outpaced by tourism.
But that boon for Iceland's economy comes with a serious drawback, notes Wired, as tourists trample over aforementioned natural beauty, infrastructures groan, and yes, sewers overflow.
If you asked a group of people in the past five years where they'd been itching to travel, Iceland would definitely come up. But the latest tourism figures indicate interest in visiting the ...
OSLO, Norway--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Iceland’s growth strategy in the tourism industry has become a benchmark for the global tourism industry. It reflects, amongst other things, the results of Iceland ...
Tourism now accounts for about a third of Iceland’s exports and the foreign currency they bring in has proved vital for the country’s attempts to lift its crisis-era capital controls.
Iceland’s tourism boom that saw the island nation’s visitor numbers quadruple in just seven years could be over. In 2010, fewer than 500,000 people made the trip to Iceland’s otherworldly ...