- Coastal erosion is stripping private property and land from residents in Gra Ligia, Arvi, and Keratokampos.
- Scientific data presented at a Heraklion summit warn that climate change accelerates flooding and erosion.
- Experts demand immediate intervention to protect vulnerable ecosystems and coastal villages from permanent loss.
The Mediterranean does not just touch Crete’s shores; it claims them. In the quiet coastal stretches of Gra Ligia, Arvi, and Keratokampos, the sea acts as a silent thief. Generations of families who built their lives by the water now watch the waves advance closer each season.
What used to be stable ground, gardens, and patios are dissolving into the surf. The steady lapping of the water has shifted from a soothing backdrop to the sound of direct property loss, leaving residents watching their land shrink in real time.
This environmental shift was the central focus of a recent summit held in Heraklion. Researchers gathered to present extensive vulnerability data detailing how coastal erosion threatens the island, particularly its protected habitats within the Natura 2000 network. The findings confirm that the damage is no longer a distant prediction but a current reality. The combination of rising sea levels, extreme weather, and poorly planned infrastructure has stripped the coastline of its natural defenses.