- The Region of Crete participated in the CPMR conference in Patras.
- Regional representative Giorgos Alexakis focused on transport and accessibility issues.
- Discussions centered on European transport networks and regional connectivity.
- The conference emphasized support for island and remote regions.
- Crete called for continued EU investment in ports and transport infrastructure.
- European funding remains essential for large-scale transport projects.
European conferences often produce an impressive collection of phrases. Connectivity. Accessibility. Sustainability. Cohesion. Strategic corridors.
For island regions such as Crete, however, these terms are not simply policy vocabulary. They describe everyday realities that determine whether people can reach jobs, universities, hospitals, and markets without turning a simple journey into an expedition.
That message was delivered at the recent conference of the Conference of Peripheral Maritime Regions (CPMR) in Patras, where the Region of Crete joined representatives from across Europe to discuss the future of transportation and regional accessibility.
Representing Crete was Giorgos Alexakis, CPMR Vice President for Transport and Accessibility and Regional Councillor for European and International Affairs.
His central argument was straightforward. Transportation should not be viewed merely as an infrastructure issue. It should be understood as a matter of equal opportunity.
A modern Europe cannot promise cohesion while leaving remote and island communities disconnected from the networks that drive economic and social development.
The Distance Between Maps and Reality
European transport maps often look beautifully connected. Lines cross borders. Corridors link major cities. Ports connect continents. Railways stretch across entire regions. Then reality arrives.
For many peripheral regions, including islands, significant connectivity gaps remain. Access to major transport corridors often depends on geography, funding priorities, and political decisions made hundreds or even thousands of kilometers away.
Alexakis highlighted the importance of integrating regional areas into the Trans-European Transport Network, better known as TEN-T. The objective is to ensure that regions located far from Europe’s major economic centers are not left behind as infrastructure investments continue elsewhere.
The island possesses strategic ports, busy airports, and growing tourism demand. Yet when discussions turn to modern European transport systems, high-speed rail corridors, or seamless multimodal networks, Crete often finds itself watching from the sidelines rather than participating directly.
The island may have electric buses in some areas, but nobody is expecting a bullet train from Heraklion to Chania anytime soon.
Why European Funding Still Matters
One of the strongest messages emerging from the conference concerned the importance of continued support through the Connecting Europe Facility (CEF), one of the European Union’s primary infrastructure funding mechanisms.
According to conference participants, projects involving ports, rail corridors, and cross-border transport links cannot advance without substantial European support and long-term planning. The point may sound obvious, yet it remains increasingly important as competition for funding grows across Europe.
Large infrastructure projects rarely generate immediate political rewards. They require patience, cooperation, and budgets large enough to make even experienced accountants nervous.
Without European financing, many regions would struggle to modernize transport networks or strengthen connections to broader European markets.
Ports Remain Crete’s Most Valuable Transport Asset
Alexakis also emphasized the strategic importance of ports, particularly for regions connected to the Balkans and the Black Sea.
Ports are no longer viewed solely as gateways for ships and cargo. Increasingly, they function as economic hubs that support trade, energy security, tourism, logistics, and what policymakers like to call the “blue economy.”
For Crete, this is hardly an abstract concept. The island’s relationship with the outside world has always depended on maritime connections. Long before Brussels created transport strategies and funding instruments, Cretans understood that prosperity arrived by sea.
A European Future That Includes the Islands
As the conference concluded, Alexakis argued that European transport policy should serve all regions rather than concentrating resources exclusively in already powerful urban centers.
It is a reasonable objective, though one that remains easier to describe in conference halls than to achieve in practice.
For Crete, the conversation is not merely about infrastructure. It is about ensuring that island communities remain competitive, accessible, and economically resilient in a Europe that continues to grow more interconnected.
The challenge is that while policymakers discuss tomorrow’s transport systems, many citizens are still trying to navigate today’s.