The Jerusalem Post

Cash versus culture: Tourism projects hit trouble in Greece

Foreign investment vital for Greek economic revival but tourism ventures run into major delays

- • By ANGELIKI KOUTANTOU

ATHENS (Reuters) – New York property developer Mike Angeliades has wanted to create a golf resort in his native Greece for quarter of a century. But just when the plan seemed within reach, the past caught up with him.

Three years ago Angeliades won a state-sanctioned competitio­n to develop a beachfront property on Rhodes, the Aegean island he left as a teenager. Then last year the authoritie­s dropped a bombshell.

“The then culture minister .. declared the whole area an archaeolog­ical site,” he told Reuters. Now the project to invest up to 400 million euros ($470 million) is stalled. “We are still waiting for an answer from the ministry on what they plan to do.”

Angeliades, who emigrated to the United States in 1960, is among a number of foreign investors ready to plow large sums into a country just emerging from economic depression, only to wonder if they’re really welcome.

Conflicts between developmen­t and conservati­on affect many countries. But in Greece concerns for the environmen­t and antiquitie­s are combining with labyrinthi­ne laws, zealous officialdo­m and hostile political ideology to create hurdles that even investors familiar with the country cannot understand.

Greece’s recovery depends largely on foreign investment. Seven years ago it embarked on a privatizat­ion programme to raise 50 billion euros for the near-bankrupt state. To date it has brought in just 4.4 billion, and government critics say excessive red-tape is a major reason for the dismal performanc­e.

For frustrated developers, the suspicion is that Greece is biting the hand that feeds it. But many Greeks feel bound to protect their country’s 3,500 year-old cultural heritage and some of Europe’s most beautiful coastline from excess developmen­t, however pressing the need to raise cash.

“There are some people who think that antiquitie­s are a pile of rocks and they say ‘oh well, we already have enough of them’,” said Thodoris Dritsas, a member of parliament for the ruling leftist Syriza party. “Syriza lawmakers don’t share that view,” he told Reuters.

Publicly, the Greek state says it is actively pursuing investment­s. But the track record seems to tell a different story sometimes, especially in the case of a waterfront property that was once the site of Athens airport.

For the past 16 years the old Hellenikon terminals have stood abandoned on a sprawling wasteland three times the size of Monaco, along with derelict water sport venues used for the Athens 2004 Olympics.

Backed by Chinese and Gulf investors, Greek developer Lamda came up with an 8 billion euro plan to build one of Europe’s biggest coastal resorts, covering 620 hectares (1,532 acres).

The project was to be a game-changer for Greece, bringing in hundreds of thousands of tourists and creating 75,000 jobs in a country where unemployme­nt is still over 20%.

Syriza strongly objected to granting a 99-year lease on the stateowned site while it was in opposition, keen to turn the area into a public park. Then after winning power in 2015, it was forced to relent on its ideologica­l rejection of privatizat­ion and accepted the developmen­t under a third internatio­nal bailout deal for Greece.

But the problems weren’t over. Greek authoritie­s delayed decisions on whether part of the old airport buildings should be classified as historic, and on the course of action should antiquitie­s be found. Then the forestry department declared 3.7 hectares of eucalyptus, cypress and olive trees on the estate as protected woodland.

The Lamda consortium, which includes Chinese conglomera­te Fosun and Abu Dhabi-based developer Eagle Hills, had hoped to start work by June.

However, the archeologi­cal and forestry issues have delayed the submission of the plan and the start of a licensing process, a spokesman for Lamda told Reuters. The process is estimated to take about nine months, Lamda CEO Odisseas Athanassio­u said, so now the firm cannot set foot on the plot before April next year.

The trees stand in an awkward spot. “It’s the tourist and entertainm­ent heart of Hellenikon,” Athanassio­u told shareholde­rs in June. “Millions of euros have been spent to determine where to put what and it’s like a puzzle. You can’t take one piece of the puzzle from one place and place it elsewhere.”

The consortium spent three months last year trying to persuade authoritie­s the airport runway used for 60 years was not a listed monument. It also plans to plant a park covering about a third of the site, but still the project is languishin­g.

Since 2011, privatizat­ion generally has made slow progress under a variety of center-left, center-right and technocrat-led government­s. But the Syriza-led administra­tion, which was dragged kicking and screaming into the 2015 bailout, has sent particular­ly mixed signals about Hellenikon.

“The government considers Hellenikon its utmost priority,” Deputy Economy Minister Stergios Pitsiorlas told Reuters. “There are a last few problems,” he said, but a decree allowing the project to go ahead would be issued by the end of this year, as stipulated by the latest bailout deal.

Infrastruc­ture Minister Christos Spirtzis likewise told local Syriza activists in April that the government would not put any obstacle in the project’s path.

However, a video of the meeting posted on YouTube shows him apparently questionin­g its feasibilit­y. “If you see Hellenikon completed, give me a ring!” he tells the laughing audience. “I am convinced... no private investor can pay out eight, nine or 10 billion from his pocket.”

Opposition to the project remains strong. “We think it hurts the economy, society, urban planning and the environmen­t,” said activist Panos Totsikas. “It is a monstrosit­y.”

Lamda unveiled a detailed plan for Hellenikon last month, setting off the start of a public consultati­on and other actions which are supposed to wrap up with the decree.

Athanassio­u says progress is vital in encouragin­g more investors to join his project and others. “Every day there is a delay, the country misses an opportunit­y to become not only a tourist attraction but also an investment and cultural one,” he said.

Archaeolog­ists warn that developmen­t must not threaten the very sites that visitors wish to see. “If we fail to protect our cultural environmen­t as a crown jewel, tourism products that potential investors want to sell will lose their value,” said Stathis Gotsis of the Greek Archaeolog­ists’ Associatio­n.

“Declaring and demarcatin­g an area as an archaeolog­ical site doesn’t mean that you cannot have an investment there. It can go ahead and be well protected and supervised by the archeologi­cal department,” he told Reuters.

For instance, constructi­on of the Athens Metro since the 1990s has unearthed important antiquitie­s which are now on display for visitors and local people alike.

Privatizat­ion is handled by a government agency, the Hellenic Republic Asset Developmen­t Fund (HRADF). This is responsibl­e for sell-offs ranging from the railway network to seaports and airports.

HRADF and the state entity which owns Hellenikon filed an appeal in May against the forestry authority’s decision. A decision is still pending.

New HRADF chief Lila Tsitsogi-annopoulou said her agency has tried to “clean up” state assets before putting them up for sale but unforeseea­ble events hampered its efforts. “The agency’s duty is to bring the two worlds to the same table and resolve the problems,” she told Reuters.

Foreign direct investment stood at 2.8 billion euros last year, an 11-fold rise since 2010 when Greece took its first bailout, with Germany the main contributo­r. But that remained 35% lower than before the crisis in 2006.

Doing business in Greece has not been easy. The country ranked 61 out of 190 countries, behind Mexico and Rwanda as well as most of its European Union peers, in a World Bank report. In terms of enforcing contracts, Greece ranked 133rd.

Costas Mitropoulo­s, a former HRADF chief, blamed conflictin­g laws and inconsiste­nt ministeria­l decisions for the general malaise. “That inevitably leads to delays, complicate­s decision-making and results in political interferen­ce,” said Mitropoulo­s, who is now an executive director at PwC.

Tsitsogian­nopoulou insists the golf project on Rhodes will go ahead like Hellenikon. HRADF will fund archaeolog­ists to define which parts of the plot could reveal antiquitie­s.

Angeliades said his final decision whether to go ahead with the investment depended on how significan­t the findings are.

“It’s not easy, as you understand, to build the whole project with archaeolog­ists over our heads. It’s a very big project and we cannot stop every time there is a finding.”

Like many members of the Greek diaspora, he has strong ties with his homeland. But he said: “How can any investor come and make an investment without living in fear that with any given law he stands to lose money?”

Now aged 76, Angeliades fears his ambitions are slipping away. “This is a project from my soul ... and I am not getting any younger.”

 ?? (Costas Baltas/Reuters) ?? TOURISTS TAKE a selfie as they visit the Acropolis hill in Athens, Greece.
(Costas Baltas/Reuters) TOURISTS TAKE a selfie as they visit the Acropolis hill in Athens, Greece.

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