If a project satisfies one of the above criterion, the tax credit will be a maximum €10,000.
The quality of water is also an essential aspect of the sustainability of tourism. Following the investment in the purification process of sewage water at various outfall treatment centres, the quality of sea water around the Maltese Islands has improved. It is now considered one of the best in Europe. This is also being reinforced by the increase in the number of Blue Flags awarded to local beaches.
€150 million funding, the biggest ever, for a project in Malta, is enabling the Water Services Corporation to produce more water, recycle used water, and improve energy efficiency.
Desalination plants are being upgraded, and more seawater can be processed. This means macedonia mobile database that far less water will need to be taken out of ground-based sources – about four billion fewer litres each year. In Gozo, a plant using advanced ‘reverse osmosis’ technology boosted daily water production by nine million litres a day.
These initiatives are known collectively as the ‘Net Zero Impact Utility’ project, and they are cutting edge in terms of sustainable water production usage across Malta and Gozo. EU investment in this project has helped make this “holistic” and sustainable approach possible.
Malta Tourism Authority’s ‘Eco-certification Scheme’ creates more awareness and promotes sound environmental practices amongst hotel operators and other providers of tourist accommodation. This voluntary national scheme has now expanded from initially being just hotels to include other forms of accommodation. As a result, it is credited with raising standards in environmental practices within this highly important sector.
Water quality and Blue Flags awarded local beaches
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