Renewable energy permits granted in Cyprus July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Energy.add a comment
The Cyprus government expects to grant licences for renewable power generation in the autumn in an attempt to meet European Union commitments on switching to cleaner energy, Agriculture and Natural Resources Minister Fotis Fotiou said yesterday.
Fotiou also said the authorities would look at making it compulsory that “clean” energy be used on public projects. “By the end of August or the beginning of September, the ministerial committee will meet to grant the final licences so that we can meet the six per cent quota of renewable energy in total power generation,” Fotiou told the Reuters news agency.
Renewables now represent 0.3 per cent of Cyprus’s total energy generation drawn mainly from solar energy, which the island has in abundance. It wants to build the level up to 6.0 per cent by 2010. This week the European Commission cut Cyprus’s carbon dioxide allowance by 23 per cent to 5.48 million tonnes per year between 2008 and 2012.
Cyprus now relies on fuel to fire its power stations, and has said the onus is on heavy industry to cut down on their emissions in the light of the EU cutting its CO2 allowance.
Authorities planned to contact affected industry which included the state-controlled electricity utility EAC, cement and brick works as well as operators of desalination plants, Fotiou said. “We must encourage power production with renewable energy sources,” said Fotiou. Protests from local communities had so far prevented the development of wind farms, he added.
One of the most popular parks in Athens July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Nature.add a comment
Friendly and well-tended, Veikou attracts people of all ages who enjoy its greenery, clean open spaces and sports facilities > An ideal place for walking, relaxing, cycling, other sports activities and playing games, Veikou Park is like a little paradise for the residents of the surrounding areas of Galatsi, Nea Ionia and Filothei.
Once notorious, in the 1980s it became a park. Now it gets 5,000 visitors a day, making it the most popular park in a city that has never learned to live with open spaces. Veikou Park is living proof that people will flock to other places apart from shopping malls, though the state has paved the way for one of these monstrosities in the same space as the park, infuriating its fans.
It is a sunny Sunday in summer and already by 9 a.m. the roads around Veikou Park in Galatsi have begun to fill with parked cars. In the morning, it’s mostly families with children and elderly people. Around midday comes the turn of the 20-40 age group, who come to exercise or enjoy a coffee in the shade of the pine trees.
It would be hard to find a nicer place for children to play in urban Athens. It’s fenced, with winding paths perfect for cycling, a playground for the littlest kids, and a basketball court and soccer ground for the older ones. In short, Veikou is just the kind of friendly, well-tended park the average, harassed Athenian needs.
And that is one of the reasons it is one of the most popular, if not the most popular, green spaces in Athens. “It’s a really lovely green space, where it’s easy to spend time, go for a walk, have a coffee, take your child to the swings. We’re very lucky to have such a place nearby,” a local resident said. “In fact, Veikou Park organizes lots of cultural events in September and for the Clean Monday holiday,” she added.
“And it’s a great place for sports. I often come here with my friends to play basketball,” said another resident. “We come here often, especially on weekends. It’s ideal for families with small children,” he added. “It’s really important to me that animals are not permitted in the park. So children can play on the grass without worrying that they will catch anything. Most parks in our neighborhood have been turned into pets’ toilets.”
What makes this park different? It’s a bit like the old question about the chicken and the egg. Is it the fact that the public likes to go there that eventually made the park well-tended, or is it looking after the park that brings in the public?
Veikou Park is a model of how to manage a green space and recreational area. Its 25.6 hectares contain a small outdoor theater, a children’s playground, an outdoor swimming pool, soccer facilities, tennis and basketball courts, an indoor gym, a cafe and a summer cinema. The park is guarded 24 hours a day and, apart from the guards, the staff includes gym trainers, a doctor, a nurse, gardeners and cleaners.
Achilleas Vretzos from the Galatsi Municipality, who is in charge of the park, explained that it was once part of the Veikou Estate that belonged to a big landholder who owned a large part of what is now Galatsi. In the mid-1980s, the Mayor of the time, Vassilis Papadionysiou, encroached on part of the estate to create the sports center that would become the nucleus of the park. Gradually the area lost its notoriety, rapes and even murders had been committed in the quarry on the estate, and became a landmark for the surrounding area of Galatsi, Nea Ionia and Filothei.
“In 1986-87, when the sports center went into operation, the park used to get 300-400 visitors a day. Now an estimated 5,000 people a day visit the park, including many schools that come here on excursions,” said Vretzos, who is especially proud of the park’s 920 rosebushes, “in every imaginable color.”
Veikou Park is a small green section of a vast tract of land bounded by Galatsi, Nea Ionia and Filothei. The expanse of the park is that part of the Veikou Estate that was not developed, and covers an area of about 400 hectares. There is a stark contrast between the park and the neighboring areas, in which two schools have been built in recent years.
In the past 10 years, the tract of land became the focus of legal battles about whether it should be characterized as a forested area. In 1934, the Agriculture Ministry issued a ruling (No. 108424) for the reforestation of part of Attica, which stated that the area concerned was forest vegetation and pine forest before its destruction and degradation.
An Athens Forest Inspectorate document dated November 11, 1968, designated half of the area as farmland. On September 6, 1994, the prefect of Athens designated 28.4 hectares of the area for reforestation. And on October 22, 1999, the Athens Forest Inspectorate designated 18.9 hectares of that area for reforestation.
The legal disputes started in 1994, when 39 people claiming to be owners of land in the area appealed to the Council of State against the prefect’s ruling but their appeal was rejected in a 2000 decision (No. 1968/2000). Other court decisions accepted that in some cases certain plots of land on the estate were not forest but private real estate.
The only party involved that did not need the decision of a court of law was the state, which put the Olympic indoor badminton court in an open part of the estate near the EYDAP water utility’s premises. After the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, the building was leased to Olympic Real Estate SA for conversion into a mall, a development which has met with strenuous opposition from some locals who believe that a mall would contradict the character of the estate and would be bad for the area.
Danger still high as forest fires ease July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Greece News.add a comment
Improved weather conditions helped firefighters to contain blazes in different parts of Greece yesterday. However, authorities warned of a “very high” risk of fire today.
A massive fire in Corinth, west of Athens, was dying down after it burnt at least 10 homes and some 2,500 hectares since it started on Tuesday. A second blaze in Diakofto, northern Peloponnese, was also partially controlled. A third fire that started at a military firing range in Malakasa, north of Athens, and spread to a nearby forest area was causing firefighters problems as abandoned explosives in the area were continually going off.
Meanwhile, authorities issued a fire warning for this weekend and called on residents to avoid dangerous actions, such as burning rubbish. Firefighters in the areas of Attica, Viotia, Evia and Corinth will all be on high alert.
Government spokesman Theodoros Roussopoulos said the performance of firefighters so far this summer has been better than in previous years. “There are large-scale fires in hard-to-reach places in difficult weather conditions. They are being handled in some circumstances very quickly and in others not so quickly. In every case, the performance of firefighters has improved in comparison to the past,” he said.
Second heat wave begins in Greece July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Greece News.add a comment
Temperature to hit 39C today and rise 1C every day until Wednesday
The temperature in Athens is expected to reach 39 Celsius (102 Fahrenheit) today and then rise by 1C every day until Wednesday, when the temperature is due to hit 43C (109F), the National Meteorological Service (EMY) said yesterday.
Forecasters expect the heat to ease gradually from Thursday onward but have warned that there will be a smaller drop than usual in temperatures during the evenings from today. This will be the first heat wave to hit the city since the fire on Mount Parnitha last month. Environmentalists believe that the forest on Parnitha was responsible for cooling the air in Athens by several degrees.
Turkish leader calls for Cyprus dialogue July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Cyprus Occupied.add a comment
Turkish-Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat, on yesterday’s 33rd anniversary of Turkey’s invasion of Cyprus, called on the Greek Cypriots to resume negotiations to reunite the divided Mediterranean island.
“I call, in all sincerity, the Greek-Cypriot party to the negotiating table for talks in good faith… to bring about peace and a solution to Cyprus,” Talat said in an address in the Turkish-occupied and military controlled north of Cyprus. “I assure you that the smallest gesture of good will by Greek Cypriots will in return mean greater good-will gestures on our part,” he added.
Last week, Talat backpedaled from a planned meeting with President Tassos Papadopoulos amid uproar over a canceled soccer match. According to Talat’s aide, Rasit Pertev, the Turkish-Cypriot leader changed his mind after the Greek Cypriots exerted pressure for the cancellation of a game between a Turkish-Cypriot team and an English club on July 11.
Cyprus government spokesman Vassilis Palmas confirmed that the key meeting between Papadopoulos and Talat was called off because of the soccer match spat, but said the government was not involved in its cancellation. The two leaders had been expected to meet in a bid to break the deadlock on the UN-led process toward reunification talks that both men signed on to in July last year.
Yesterday, Turkish aircraft performed an aerobatic display over the Turkish-occupied north of Nicosia to celebrate the 1974 invasion of the island, while tanks and armored vehicles paraded in Europe’s last divided capital. In contrast, sirens wailed across the southern half of Cyprus to mark the exact moment 33 years ago when Turkish troops invaded.
The invasion, launched in response to an Athens-engineered military coup to unite Cyprus with Greece, is called the “black anniversary” among Greek Cypriots because of the 3,000 people killed or still missing. At 5.30 a.m. on July 20, 1974, Turkish troops landed on a narrow northern beachhead in Kyrenia five days after Greek-Cypriot nationalists, backed by the Greek junta ruling Athens, ousted then President Archbishop Makarios. The invasion was described by Ankara as a “peace operation” aimed at protecting the minority Turkish-Cypriot community from being victimized in the aftermath of the coup.
Opposition to demolish listed buildings near Acropolis July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Architecture, Arts Museums.add a comment
Protests by architects and citizens have intensified ahead of the planned demolition of two listed buildings blocking the view of the Parthenon from the new Acropolis Museum in central Athens.
The owners of the two buildings on pedestrian Dionysiou Areopagitou Street, the road leading to the Acropolis, one a prime example of art deco architecture and the other an impressive neoclassical structure, have the backing of architects and representatives of cultural organizations who may seek legal action.
Protesters are outraged as, they say, authorities had promised to protect the two structures. But the buildings have to be removed in order to provide the desired “optical connection” between the new Acropolis Museum and the Parthenon, Cultural Ministry sources have been quoted as saying.
The new Acropolis Museum, which is to open its doors to the public next year after long delays, currently has its view of the Parthenon obscured by the rear side of the two buildings, which are run down, unlike their impressive facades. Protesters have proposed a series of alternatives to demolition, including renovation of the buildings or the planting of tall trees between the structures and the Museum.
The Museum’s designer, Swiss-French architect Bernard Tschumi, has not commented on the protests but suggested that the view between the Museum and the Parthenon be uncluttered. “The new Museum is about interrelation. It is there to show on the inside what also belongs to it on the outside,” he said last week in Athens.
The Hellenic Society for the Protection of Cultural Heritage last week threatened to appeal to the Council of State against the decision by the Central Archaeological Council (KAS) to bulldoze the structures.
Evzone at Nicosia’s Makedonitissa Tymvos July 21, 2007
Posted by grhomeboy in Cyprus Occupied.add a comment









