/ 16 July 2004

Save water, don’t play golf — Med tourists warned

They attract millions of tourists seeking to improve their swing in the sun. But the rush to coastal golf courses around the arid southern Mediterranean is posing a grave threat to its limited fresh water stocks.

Each of an estimated 200 courses built around the Mediterranean consumes the same amount of fresh water as a town of 12 000 people, according to a report yesterday by the World Wide Fund for Nature. Spain’s parched south-east is reportedly planning to build at least 89 more, while Greece wants 40 and even Cyprus is building eight.

The report urged eco-friendly tourists to boycott golf courses and swimming pools in highly stressed areas, and to take shorter showers. ”We are not saying people shouldn’t enjoy their holidays,” the report’s author, Lucia de Stefano, said. ”A lot of water can be saved without great effort.” The report describes a region wilting under the pressure of more than 135-million visitors a year to beaches in what are mainly arid coastal areas stretching from northern Morocco and Spain to Greece, Turkey, Cyprus and Tunisia.

That figure is set to more than double in two decades’ time, as the few gaps left in the overcrowded coasts of Spain, Italy and France are filled in and new tourist destinations such as Tunisia and Turkey hurriedly build over their coastlines. ”The tourism industry depends on water and at the moment it is destroying the very resource it needs,” WWF’s Holger Schmid said as the group warned that visitors to what is the world’s biggest tourist destination looked set to double over 20 years.

The huge amount of land being concreted over every year will, in itself, add to the overall ecological damage, the report warns. ”The increasing number of tourists along the limited space of the Mediterranean coast will push urban boundaries further inland, most likely destroying the few remaining coastal wetlands and lagoons,” the report said. More than half the wetlands of France, Greece, Italy and Spain have already disappeared, according to one EU study.

Mediterranean countries are already raiding limited underground water supplies to keep up with the demand from tourism and agriculture.

In the developing countries of north Africa, which hope to imitate the tourist boom of the northern Mediterranean, water demand will double over 20 years and underground water ”may last at best 50 years”.

Morocco’s Moulouya estuary, with its 400 hectares of marshlands, looks set to go the same way as the wetlands of southern Europe, with tourist developments threatening the endangered monk seal and rare birds such as the slender-billed curlew or the Andalusian hemipode.

Tourism accounts for 7% of pollution in the Mediterranean sea. ”Health problems such as infections of the ear, nose, and throat, hepatitis and dysentery can result from swimming in polluted sea waters,” the report notes.

Building, meanwhile, continues at breakneck speed, with Tunisia planning to double the 50 miles of coastline already built over for tourists.

France has built 335 000 second homes in 20 years while Spain is reportedly building 180 000 a year, 40% of them for Britons. In 27 towns on Spain’s Alicante coast a stable population of 150 000 is pushed up to 1,1-million in August. Water consumption in the Balearic islands, meanwhile, increased 15-fold from 1980 to 1995. — Guardian Unlimited Â