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Save the Cretan Landscape: Stop Golf Development on Cavo Sidero - The Petition Site
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Save the Cretan Landscape: Stop Golf Development on Cavo Sidero

Save the Cretan Landscape: Stop Golf Development on Cavo Sidero

Target:
The Greek Government and The Holy Orthodox Church
Crete is not just crowded holiday resorts.  It still has its remote, wild places, even on the coast.  One is the extreme north-east tip, a dry jagged peninsula of lonely, vulture-haunted crags, grey-green bushes and white limestone desert, far from the tourist crowds.  Into this unlikely location developers are trying to insert several golf-courses, holiday villages and hotels, on land leased from a venerable but sadly declining monastery.

GOLF AND THE ENVIRONMENT

The sport of golf has moved far from its ancient beginnings in Scottish sand-dunes, when it was played in an unaltered landscape by shepherd-boys and kings and did nobody any harm.  It was transformed by Americans who industrialized it, bulldozed it and watered it into unsuitable parts of the world.  Modern golf in the wrong places can do immense environmental and social damage.  Golf-courses now try to keep green all through the year, even the rainless summers of the Mediterranean, and use immense quantities of water and polluting chemicals.
    The proposed development by Minoan Group and its subsidiary Loyalward http://www.minoangroup.com/ is comically unsuited to this site.  Anyone who has experienced the merciless winds will be sceptical about playing golf here at all.  There is no infrastructure, and providing any would do great damage to the ecology.  There is no local population; workers will have to be brought in from outside. Cliff-bound, rugged coasts and rough seas are unattractive to conventional seaside tourism: the few tiny beaches are choked with sea-brought rubbish. The site is several hours' journey from the places that tourists come to Crete to see.  What will they find to do when they get tired of golf?  Two smaller developments in the peninsula have already failed.

UNSUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The development is unsustainable because of lack of water for the golf-courses, hotels, workers' dwellings etc.  It goes against the best principles even of American golf-course design: instead of working with a well-adapted site, the developers would force golf on a dry and rocky area that is absurdly ill-adapted to it.  They propose desalination, but a large desalination factory will do further damage to the ecosystem: it will either cover a great area of land with wind turbines and/or solar collectors, or will demand a large supply of energy, which is scarce in Crete; and disposing of the salt produced will result in further destruction.

THE CAVO SIDERO LANDSCAPE
The island of Crete is one of the world's biological hot-spots.  This particular corner is the home of special, drought- or salt-adapted vegetation including some of the world's rarest plants.  Like many semi-deserts it is rich in species: tiny, colourful plants that spring up after the winter rains and are gone before summer.  A small part of the area is the palm-grove of Vaο, known to the outside world as the largest area of the special, native Cretan palm-tree.  In other countries Sidhero would long ago have been a National Park.  It is a part of Crete belatedly designated for conservation under the Natura 2000 scheme, which is utterly inconsistent with large-scale development. Please see
http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320009
http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320006.
    The peninsula is also of the greatest archaeological importance, for a peculiar reason.  In antiquity, probably under a more favourable climate, it was farmland.  In Greek and Roman times it supported the city of Itanos, until the decline of the Byzantine empire.  Then came the corsairs. Pirates especially haunted this corner of Crete, where they preyed on passing ships and also raided on land.  With the fall of Itanos the peninsula became untenable and remained uninhabited for a thousand years. In consequence, Neolithic and Minoan farms, terraces and fields and check-dams of Ancient Greek and Byzantine cultivators survive on a landscape-wide scale, not hidden or destroyed by the works of later cultivators.  Here, as nowhere else except on a few remote islets, one can see what the farmed countryside of Mediterranean Antiquity looked like.

ENVIRONMENTAL AND CULTURAL IMPACT
The environmental impact assessment that we have seen is perfunctory.  It sets out vague general principles but lacks essential detail.  It deals with those areas proposed to be built on in the first instance, and says nothing about effects on the rest of the peninsula.  In practice, development of parts of the peninsula will threaten the remainder.  If the first development is successful it will lead to demands for expansion.  Even if this does not happen, areas not built on are likely - whatever the present intentions of the developers - to be encroached on by service buildings, car-parks, earth- and rubbish-dumps and litter.  The grazing regime, essential to maintaining the vegetation, is likely to be affected.  The famous palm-grove, though not directly encroached on, is threatened by contamination of the ground-water on which it depends, and also because developers find it difficult to resist bringing in foreign palm-trees, and with them the red palm weevil, a deadly insect for native palms.
    The developers' archaeological assessment of the area is entirely inconsistent with what we have seen ourselves.  Proposed for protection are the site of Itanos itself, two scraps of landscape, and five isolated sites (one of which is a Minoan villa already heavily damaged by bulldozing). Two of the ancient sites are in the wrong places on the map, suggesting that the investigators did not actually visit the area. The proposed road to the desalination plant will run right through an important site, where substantial ancient building foundations are clearly visible. Singling out these few places for protection, however, is sadly inadequate; nearly the whole landscape is, in effect, an archaeological site.  Its features, though perfectly capable of surviving if left alone, are fragile and easily destroyed by the kind of casual earth-moving that inevitably goes with commercial development Please see  http://webefa.efa.gr/prospection-itanos/.

The World Archaeological Congress has also written a letter to the Prime Minister of Greece protesting the destruction of antiquities by the Cavo Sidero development. Please see:
http://rapidshare.com/files/111131288/WAC_letter__PM_Greece.pdf.html
 

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
We are not opposed to development as such.  Such a scheme might be acceptable in the right place, next to an existing resort where it might lengthen the holiday season and provide valuable employment.  It is pointless and absurd in a remote corner.  North-east Crete needs only to be left alone, or perhaps developed for more sensitive eco-tourism that would make its unique landscape available to those who are interested. The north-west corner of Crete is another rugged Natura 2000 area with endemic plants and antiquities; instead of golf-courses, a network of marked footpaths with signs pointing out what makes it special is being installed.

CAVO SIDERO AND THE HOLY ORTHODOX CHURCH

There is another disturbing aspect.  The land belongs to the Holy Monastery of the Panayia Akrotiriani (Our Lady of the Cape), which has been allowed to decline and now has very few monks (and presumably has little need for funds).  The monastery's lands are under the jurisdiction of His All-Holiness Bartholomew I, Patriarch of Constantinople.
    The Orthodox Church has a well-developed theology of the environment and of humanity's spiritual, as well as material duty, to live in harmony with the natural world and to care for God's creatures.  This has been repeatedly urged by the Patriarch on public occasions.  He has travelled all over the world and has spoken eloquently of the need to protect the world's special places such as Greenland and the Amazon.  The north-east corner of Crete is such a special place, over which the Patriarch has very substantial authority and influence, which so far he has not used to prevent its destruction.
Crete is not just crowded holiday resorts.  It still has its remote, wild places, even on the coast.  One is the extreme north-east tip, a dry jagged peninsula of lonely, vulture-haunted crags, grey-green bushes and white limestone desert, far from the tourist crowds.  Into this unlikely location developers are trying to insert several golf-courses, holiday villages and hotels, on land leased from a venerable but sadly declining monastery.

GOLF AND THE ENVIRONMENT

The sport of golf has moved far from its ancient beginnings in Scottish sand-dunes, when it was played in an unaltered landscape by shepherd-boys and kings and did nobody any harm.  It was transformed by Americans who industrialized it, bulldozed it and watered it into unsuitable parts of the world.  Modern golf in the wrong places can do immense environmental and social damage.  Golf-courses now try to keep green all through the year, even the rainless summers of the Mediterranean, and use immense quantities of water and polluting chemicals.
    The proposed development by Minoan Group and its subsidiary Loyalward http://www.minoangroup.com/ is comically unsuited to this site.  Anyone who has experienced the merciless winds will be sceptical about playing golf here at all.  There is no infrastructure, and providing any would do great damage to the ecology.  There is no local population; workers will have to be brought in from outside. Cliff-bound, rugged coasts and rough seas are unattractive to conventional seaside tourism: the few tiny beaches are choked with sea-brought rubbish. The site is several hours' journey from the places that tourists come to Crete to see.  What will they find to do when they get tired of golf?  Two smaller developments in the peninsula have already failed.

UNSUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
The development is unsustainable because of lack of water for the golf-courses, hotels, workers' dwellings etc.  It goes against the best principles even of American golf-course design: instead of working with a well-adapted site, the developers would force golf on a dry and rocky area that is absurdly ill-adapted to it.  They propose desalination, but a large desalination factory will do further damage to the ecosystem: it will either cover a great area of land with wind turbines and/or solar collectors, or will demand a large supply of energy, which is scarce in Crete; and disposing of the salt produced will result in further destruction.

THE CAVO SIDERO LANDSCAPE
The island of Crete is one of the world's biological hot-spots.  This particular corner is the home of special, drought- or salt-adapted vegetation including some of the world's rarest plants.  Like many semi-deserts it is rich in species: tiny, colourful plants that spring up after the winter rains and are gone before summer.  A small part of the area is the palm-grove of Vaο, known to the outside world as the largest area of the special, native Cretan palm-tree.  In other countries Sidhero would long ago have been a National Park.  It is a part of Crete belatedly designated for conservation under the Natura 2000 scheme, which is utterly inconsistent with large-scale development. Please see
http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320009
http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320006.
    The peninsula is also of the greatest archaeological importance, for a peculiar reason.  In antiquity, probably under a more favourable climate, it was farmland.  In Greek and Roman times it supported the city of Itanos, until the decline of the Byzantine empire.  Then came the corsairs. Pirates especially haunted this corner of Crete, where they preyed on passing ships and also raided on land.  With the fall of Itanos the peninsula became untenable and remained uninhabited for a thousand years. In consequence, Neolithic and Minoan farms, terraces and fields and check-dams of Ancient Greek and Byzantine cultivators survive on a landscape-wide scale, not hidden or destroyed by the works of later cultivators.  Here, as nowhere else except on a few remote islets, one can see what the farmed countryside of Mediterranean Antiquity looked like.

ENVIRONMENTAL AND CULTURAL IMPACT
The environmental impact assessment that we have seen is perfunctory.  It sets out vague general principles but lacks essential detail.  It deals with those areas proposed to be built on in the first instance, and says nothing about effects on the rest of the peninsula.  In practice, development of parts of the peninsula will threaten the remainder.  If the first development is successful it will lead to demands for expansion.  Even if this does not happen, areas not built on are likely - whatever the present intentions of the developers - to be encroached on by service buildings, car-parks, earth- and rubbish-dumps and litter.  The grazing regime, essential to maintaining the vegetation, is likely to be affected.  The famous palm-grove, though not directly encroached on, is threatened by contamination of the ground-water on which it depends, and also because developers find it difficult to resist bringing in foreign palm-trees, and with them the red palm weevil, a deadly insect for native palms.
    The developers' archaeological assessment of the area is entirely inconsistent with what we have seen ourselves.  Proposed for protection are the site of Itanos itself, two scraps of landscape, and five isolated sites (one of which is a Minoan villa already heavily damaged by bulldozing). Two of the ancient sites are in the wrong places on the map, suggesting that the investigators did not actually visit the area. The proposed road to the desalination plant will run right through an important site, where substantial ancient building foundations are clearly visible. Singling out these few places for protection, however, is sadly inadequate; nearly the whole landscape is, in effect, an archaeological site.  Its features, though perfectly capable of surviving if left alone, are fragile and easily destroyed by the kind of casual earth-moving that inevitably goes with commercial development Please see  http://webefa.efa.gr/prospection-itanos/.

The World Archaeological Congress has also written a letter to the Prime Minister of Greece protesting the destruction of antiquities by the Cavo Sidero development. Please see:
http://rapidshare.com/files/111131288/WAC_letter__PM_Greece.pdf.html
 

SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
We are not opposed to development as such.  Such a scheme might be acceptable in the right place, next to an existing resort where it might lengthen the holiday season and provide valuable employment.  It is pointless and absurd in a remote corner.  North-east Crete needs only to be left alone, or perhaps developed for more sensitive eco-tourism that would make its unique landscape available to those who are interested. The north-west corner of Crete is another rugged Natura 2000 area with endemic plants and antiquities; instead of golf-courses, a network of marked footpaths with signs pointing out what makes it special is being installed.

CAVO SIDERO AND THE HOLY ORTHODOX CHURCH

There is another disturbing aspect.  The land belongs to the Holy Monastery of the Panayia Akrotiriani (Our Lady of the Cape), which has been allowed to decline and now has very few monks (and presumably has little need for funds).  The monastery's lands are under the jurisdiction of His All-Holiness Bartholomew I, Patriarch of Constantinople.
    The Orthodox Church has a well-developed theology of the environment and of humanity's spiritual, as well as material duty, to live in harmony with the natural world and to care for God's creatures.  This has been repeatedly urged by the Patriarch on public occasions.  He has travelled all over the world and has spoken eloquently of the need to protect the world's special places such as Greenland and the Amazon.  The north-east corner of Crete is such a special place, over which the Patriarch has very substantial authority and influence, which so far he has not used to prevent its destruction.
We the undersigned strongly object to the proposed tourist development at Cavo Sidero by UK-based Minoan Group and its subsidiary Loyalward, in collaboration with the Abbot of Toplou monastery. This is a declared Natura 2000 Special Protection Area (SPA # GR4320009 & SCI # GR4320006) of unique environmental and cultural significance on Crete and should not be turned into a golfing resort. It is home to the nearly unique palm oasis at Vai, endemic flora and fauna, and significant archaeological remains, all of which will be irreparably damaged by such a development. Please see this report on the website of the Hellenic Ministry for the Environment, Physical Planning and Public Works:

http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320009
http://natura.minenv.gr/natura/server/user/biotopos_info.asp?siteCode=GR4320006
 
Furthermore, the northeast corner of Crete already struggles with annual water shortages, making the construction of thirsty golf courses and rooms for 7000 thirsty people absurd. The proposed desalination plant will do further damage by covering a great area of land with wind turbines and/or solar collectors, or by demanding a large supply of energy, which is scarce in Crete. The disposal of the mineral refuse from the plant (salt, etc.) will result in significant pollution. Please see this recent article in The Guardian:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/mar/05/endangeredhabitats.endangeredspecies.
 
The Greek Supreme Court's hearing of the case has been postponed until November 7, 2008. There is still time to make a difference. If you have supported this project in the past, please reconsider your position. Please do not allow such an environmental and cultural disaster to happen. Take a stand against this development. Preserve this unique landscape.

Thank you for taking the time to read this letter.
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We signed the "Save the Cretan Landscape: Stop Golf Development on Cavo Sidero" petition!
# 7,809:
4:45 pm PDT, May 16, GEORGE PANAGIOTOPOULOS, Greece
EYXOMAI OΛΑ ΚΑΛΑ ΝΑ ΠΑΝΕ
# 7,808:
4:06 pm PDT, May 16, Vincent Delva, Benin
# 7,807:
2:14 pm PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, New York
# 7,806:
2:03 pm PDT, May 16, Johannes Pleikies, Netherlands
Kreta is amazing and holiday-parks or golf-courses are not only useless to experience that, they also endanger its natural beauty.
# 7,805:
2:02 pm PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Italy
kato ta heria apo ti fisi!!!
# 7,804:
1:24 pm PDT, May 16, Iris Ebi, Germany
Please respect that special place and nature, so little is left. And it always stays against profit only for a few people.
# 7,803:
12:23 pm PDT, May 16, Regnier Pierre, France
Cretan Landscape is more important than Golf Development for a little number of rich men
# 7,802:
11:14 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Greece
# 7,801:
10:53 am PDT, May 16, Deshouilleres Ambre, France
# 7,800:
10:10 am PDT, May 16, STEFANIA KOUTSILIERI, Greece
# 7,799:
10:04 am PDT, May 16, Ines Markodimitraki, Greece
Our island should be kept. as much as possible, as is it, avoid big building project etc.
# 7,798:
9:45 am PDT, May 16, Katerina Pappa, Greece
# 7,797:
9:22 am PDT, May 16, Lieven Knuysen, Belgium
you can't destroy a windsurfing spot like that by tourism.
# 7,796:
9:05 am PDT, May 16, Charikiopoulou Melina, Greece
# 7,795:
8:48 am PDT, May 16, Dionysios Xenikakis, Greece
# 7,794:
8:09 am PDT, May 16, LEGER JEAN, France
Pour sauver cette magnifique rιgion des promoteurs
# 7,793:
7:26 am PDT, May 16, Ελίνα Βέργου, Greece
Η πρόταση για δημιουργία γηπέδων γκολφ σε μια τόσο άνυδρη περιοχή είναι πραγματικά εντελώς παράλογη.
# 7,792:
7:15 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Greece
# 7,791:
7:12 am PDT, May 16, Michalis Giannoulis, Greece
Please SAVE the Cretan Nature
# 7,790:
7:11 am PDT, May 16, Baeten Jorg, Belgium
# 7,789:
6:42 am PDT, May 16, Stavros Kapetanakis, Greece
as stamatisoume na poulame stous ksenous tin elliniki klirwnomia!!!!
# 7,788:
6:36 am PDT, May 16, Kostas Zotos, Greece
# 7,787:
6:28 am PDT, May 16, Courteille Brigitte, France
# 7,786:
6:21 am PDT, May 16, ΜARIA ΜORAITI, Greece
Ξ•Ξ›Ξ•ΞŸΞ£ ΠΙΑ!!!!
# 7,785:
6:01 am PDT, May 16, CHOBITAKI KATERINA, Greece
# 7,784:
5:28 am PDT, May 16, Ioannis Zotos, Greece
Please respect the nature of Crete. This is what makes this place unique.
# 7,783:
5:26 am PDT, May 16, Orsalia Dimitriou, United Kingdom
# 7,782:
5:07 am PDT, May 16, NATSIA CHRYSSOULA, Greece
# 7,781:
5:03 am PDT, May 16, Trevor James, United Kingdom
This is a part of Crete that is vulnerable and special, with a flora of great importance. The destruction of Mediterranean natural vegetation by this kind of man-made landscape has already been massive over many centuries, and what little is left is too valuable to lose. The wild things that live in it are also one of the main reasons so many people other than a few golfers from other parts of the world come to Crete to see it!
# 7,780:
4:31 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Greece
Let's save the nature that our podecessors left us, so as to give it to our children.
# 7,779:
4:19 am PDT, May 16, Rotter Helmut, Germany
# 7,778:
2:57 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Greece
Save the Gretan Landscape
# 7,777:
2:54 am PDT, May 16, Stavros Manousakis, Greece
# 7,776:
2:44 am PDT, May 16, PAPAPANOS KOSTAS, Greece
# 7,775:
2:43 am PDT, May 16, Riitta Salmi, Belgium
# 7,774:
2:40 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Switzerland
# 7,773:
2:18 am PDT, May 16, Name not displayed, Switzerland
# 7,772:
1:53 am PDT, May 16, Jorunn Svendsen, Norway
# 7,771:
1:43 am PDT, May 16, Ingrid Retvedt, Norway
I want to give support to save the cretan landscape
# 7,770:
1:28 am PDT, May 16, V. Dimarch, Greece
This land belonged ones to the people of the nearby area. They donated their land to the monastery to support the living of the monks and not make them become wealthy businessman... They should care more about their spiritual calling and not how to make fortunes. Jesus said in the Gospel of MATTHEW 6,19-21 "Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon the earth, where moth and rust consume, and where thieves break through and steal: but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust doth consume, and where thieves do not break through nor steal: for where thy treasure is, there will thy heart be also." !!!!
# 7,769:
1:28 am PDT, May 16, Aggeliki Salappa, Greece
NATURE must be respected, protected, and preserved. SAVE THE CRETAN LANDASCAPE
# 7,768:
1:25 am PDT, May 16, GEORGIOS LABIS, Greece
# 7,767:
1:22 am PDT, May 16, Daremas Ioannis, Greece
# 7,766:
12:30 am PDT, May 16, Dimitrios Chryssikopoulos, Switzerland
# 7,765:
12:22 am PDT, May 16, MOUSTERAKI DORA, Greece
# 7,764:
12:19 am PDT, May 16, KATERINA ZERVOU, Greece
# 7,763:
12:14 am PDT, May 16, IOANNIS MATHIOUDAKIS, Greece
Shame of these people who are called patriots and they are willing to sacrifice the beauty and wildness of Cretan surrounding in the name profit!
# 7,762:
12:04 am PDT, May 16, FOTINI MERTIKA, Greece
# 7,761:
11:38 pm PDT, May 15, Sotiria Vasileiadi, Greece
Are you people crazy? What are you doing to nature? Should we just kill ourselves right now? Damn go get your brains checked
# 7,760:
11:36 pm PDT, May 15, Serena Kapsoritaki, Greece
# 7,759:
11:17 pm PDT, May 15, George Papadakis, Greece
# 7,758:
11:06 pm PDT, May 15, ANASTASAKI EVA, Greece
# 7,757:
11:03 pm PDT, May 15, Angeletopoulos Dimitrios, Greece
# 7,756:
10:23 pm PDT, May 15, Nikos Daskalakis, Greece
Dipl. Ing. Civil Engineer
# 7,755:
9:15 pm PDT, May 15, Tori Bush, Florida
# 7,754:
4:04 pm PDT, May 15, Frank Koenigsamen, Colorado
# 7,753:
2:57 pm PDT, May 15, Jennifer Streeter, Arizona
# 7,752:
2:09 pm PDT, May 15, Lyrenmann Werner, Switzerland
# 7,751:
2:02 pm PDT, May 15, Lyrenmann Katharina, Switzerland