Event Details
- What: Water · Food · Climate Scientific Conference
- When: Friday, June 5, 2026, at 18:00
- Where: Orthodox Academy of Crete
- Admission: Free
- Information: Dr. Antonis Kalogerakis, 28240 22245
Water has become harder to predict. Summers seem longer. Rainfall appears increasingly erratic. Meanwhile, farmers continue doing what they have always done: adapting, improvising, and hoping the next season proves kinder than the last.
Against this backdrop, the Orthodox Academy of Crete is dedicating this year’s World Environment Day event to one of the island’s most pressing challenges: how rural Crete can remain productive, resilient, and sustainable in a rapidly changing world.
On Friday, June 5, 2026, at 18:00, the Academy will host a scientific conference titled “Water · Food · Climate: Designing the Future of Rural Crete in a Global Environment Through Resilience and Sustainability.”
While the title carries the weight expected of an academic gathering, the questions at its heart are remarkably practical.
How will agriculture adapt to climate change? How should Crete manage its increasingly precious water resources? What role can smart agricultural technologies play in helping farmers remain competitive? Which successful international practices could work on an island where olive trees, vineyards, and stubborn determination have shaped the landscape for centuries?
Looking Beyond Complaints Toward Solutions
Conversations about climate change often become exercises in listing problems. This conference aims to move beyond that stage by bringing together scientific analysis, practical recommendations, and open discussion.
According to the organizers, the goal is to develop a meaningful conversation around resilience and sustainability while ensuring that farmers themselves remain part of the process.
That distinction matters. Policies designed in distant offices frequently struggle when they encounter the realities of a Cretan hillside, an aging irrigation network, or an olive grove that has survived more crises than any consultant’s report can adequately describe.
The organizers hope the event will create a space where scientific expertise and local experience can meet, challenge one another, and perhaps even agree on a few solutions.
Given the growing pressure on water supplies throughout the Mediterranean, the timing could hardly be more relevant.
An Open Invitation to the Community
The conference will take place in the main hall of the Orthodox Academy of Crete and is open to the public without charge.
Residents interested in agriculture, environmental protection, water management, rural development, or the future of Crete’s countryside may find the discussions particularly valuable.
After all, when the conversation involves water, food, and climate, it eventually becomes a conversation about everyone.
The event begins at 18:00 on Friday, June 5, and admission is free.
For a change, one of the most important discussions facing Crete does not require a ticket, a membership card, or a subscription. It only requires showing up and listening.
Program
- 6:00 PM Arrival & Registration – Welcome.
- 6:10 PM Opening Remarks – Dr. Konstantinos Zorbas, General Director of OAK.
- 6:20 PM Presentation – Professor Nikolaos Nikolaidis, School of Chemical & Environmental Engineering, Technical University of Crete – Laboratory of Hydrogeochemical Engineering & Soil Remediation. “Rural Development and Sustainability Aimed at Adapting to Climate Change.”
- 6:40 p.m. Presentation – Associate Professor Georgios Atsalakis, School of Production Engineering & Management, Technical University of Crete – Data Analysis & Forecasting Laboratory. “From Big Data to the Fields: Intelligent Forecasting Models – Climate, Water & Food.”
- 7:00 PM Presentation – Aristides Stamatakis (Max Planck), Head of Strategic Management of Greenhouse Infrastructure for Research Applications, Max Planck Institute for Plant Breeding Research, Cologne. “From the Lab to the Field: New Technologies & Smart Practices for Agricultural Production.”
- 19:20 Roundtable & Open Discussion – Moderator: Dr. Antonios Kalogerakis, Director of the Institute of Theology & Ecology – Annex of the Orthodox Academy of Crete. “Designing the Resilient Crete of the Future.”
- 8:00 PM Conclusions
Why June 5 Matters Beyond Crete
The conference takes place on World Environment Day, an international observance celebrated every year on June 5 to encourage awareness and action on environmental issues.
The initiative began in 1972 when the United Nations established the event during the landmark Conference on the Human Environment in Stockholm. Since its first official celebration in 1973, World Environment Day has grown into the world’s largest environmental outreach campaign, involving governments, businesses, schools, community organizations, and millions of individuals across more than 150 countries.
Each year highlights specific environmental challenges while encouraging practical solutions at both local and global levels. Topics commonly include:
- Climate change adaptation
- Water conservation
- Plastic pollution
- Biodiversity protection
- Ecosystem restoration
- Sustainable agriculture
For Crete, these issues are hardly abstract. Water shortages, rising temperatures, changing weather patterns, and increasing pressure on agricultural production have become familiar concerns for farmers and communities across the island.
That reality makes this year’s conference especially relevant. While experts may discuss international trends and scientific research, the questions facing rural Crete are increasingly connected to global environmental developments.
You Don’t Have to Attend a Conference to Participate
World Environment Day is not limited to scientific forums and policy discussions. Around the world, communities mark the occasion through practical activities that encourage environmental stewardship.
Readers who cannot attend the event may still choose to participate by:
- Joining a local beach, park, or neighborhood cleanup.
- Planting native trees and drought-resistant plants.
- Reducing household water consumption.
- Supporting local farmers who use sustainable practices.
- Learning more about their personal environmental footprint.
- Encouraging environmental education within schools and community groups.
In a place like Crete, where agriculture, tourism, and natural resources are deeply interconnected, even small actions can contribute to the long-term resilience of local communities. The future of Crete’s countryside will not be decided solely in conference halls or government offices. It will also be shaped by thousands of everyday decisions made in homes, farms, businesses, and communities across the island.