- The waste management authority of Crete has unanimously approved a modification of the environmental impact strategy for the Circular Economy Park at Mavros Spilios, removing all provisions that allowed high-impact industrial activity, including any form of waste incineration.
- The decision follows renewed political and public debate over waste burning in Crete, as well as updated land-use planning rules connected to the Local Urban Plan of Heraklion, which does not permit heavy-disturbance facilities in the area.
- The original environmental study dated back to 2019, and the revision aligns the project with the current institutional framework, eliminating earlier references to gasification or other production processes considered incompatible with the surrounding zone.
- In the same session, the governing board of ESDAC approved the 2026 budget without objections, after the financial plan had already passed review by the Executive Committee and the Ministry of Interior’s fiscal observatory.
- The combined decisions signal an effort to stabilize long-discussed waste management planning in Crete, where environmental concerns, land-use restrictions, and political sensitivity have repeatedly slowed the implementation of major infrastructure projects.
Environmental Study Updated After Years of Debate
The Unified Waste Management Association of Crete (ESDAC) has decided to modify the Strategic Environmental Impact Study for the planned Circular Economy Park at Mavros Spilios, removing all activities classified as high disturbance, including any form of waste incineration or gasification.
The change was approved unanimously by the Executive Committee following a proposal by the President of ESDAC and Mayor of Heraklion, Alexis Kalokairinos, and reflects both the current legal framework and the evolving position of local authorities regarding waste treatment technologies.
The original study, prepared in 2019, included provisions that allowed certain high-impact productive activities under Article 11 of Presidential Decree 5918, including the possibility of a pilot gasification unit.
Under the revised study, these provisions are eliminated, meaning that no high-disturbance activity, regardless of scale, will be permitted within the park.
According to ESDAC, the revision was necessary to adapt the project to current planning rules and to respond to the broader public discussion on waste burning, which has become one of the most sensitive environmental issues in Crete.
Local Planning Rules Also Shaped the Decision
Another factor behind the change is the ongoing preparation of the Local Urban Plan of the Municipality of Heraklion, which does not allow heavy industrial uses in the specific area.
Land-use compatibility, environmental protection, and the political position of local government authorities all contributed to the unanimous decision to exclude high-impact activities from the project.
The Circular Economy Park at Mavros Spilios remains a key element in the island’s long-term waste management strategy. Still, the revised framework indicates that future development will focus on lower-impact processing methods rather than technologies associated with incineration.
In practice, the decision attempts to balance the need for modern waste infrastructure with the strong local resistance that large-scale treatment facilities often face in Crete.
Budget Approved Without Objections
Following the decision on the environmental study, the Board of Directors of ESDAC also met to approve the association’s 2026 budget, again unanimously.
The financial plan had already been reviewed by the Executive Committee and the Ministry of Interior’s fiscal observatory, which issued no remarks, allowing the budget to move forward without modifications.
Such approvals may appear routine, yet they are essential for the continuation of waste management projects, many of which depend on stable funding and coordination among municipalities, regional authorities, and the central government.
A Step Toward Clarity in a Difficult Sector
Waste management remains one of the most complex policy areas in Crete, where infrastructure projects often encounter a combination of environmental concerns, planning restrictions, and local opposition.
The decision to remove incineration from the Mavros Spilios plan does not end the discussion, but it clarifies the project’s direction and reduces uncertainty about the types of facilities that may be developed.
For local authorities, the unanimous vote also sends a political message that major projects can move forward only when they are aligned with current regulations, local planning priorities, and public acceptance.
In a sector where delays have become almost routine, even a decision to simplify the plan can be seen as progress.