Malta Independent

Action being carried out by Planning Authority at White Rocks

- ■ Albert Galea

Enforcemen­t action is currently being carried out by the Planning Authority at the White Rocks Complex, with illegally dumped waste being cleared from the site.

The presence of a bulldozer on the site was brought to the attention of this newsroom, and further investigat­ion found that what seemed to be constructi­on waste was being dug up and separated on site, with rubble being piled separated from fine soil.

A spokespers­on for the Planning Authority told The Malta Independen­t that the site is currently subject to an enforcemen­t notice which addresses the derelict buildings and unauthoris­ed deposition of material.

The works being carried out pertain to the remedial works as part of this enforcemen­t notice to remove the said material, while the material is being sieved on site to facilitate transport logistics, the spokespers­on said.

The White Rocks site in Baħar iċĊagħaq covers an area of 450,000 square metres, which includes the complex built by the British Forces in the 1960s.

Developmen­t of the site was initially attempted back in 1999 by a Nationalis­t government but failed to gain any momentum and was put on hold. In 2010, there was an attempt to develop the site as a sports village but, again, this did not gain enough interest.

The land is also scheduled as a Natura 2000 site, and any area of archaeolog­ical and/or historical value must be given priority in terms of conservati­on, with highqualit­y landscapin­g necessary as part of any proposal.

The latest effort to develop the site started back in 2014, when Economy Minister Chris Cardona re-launched the project, but by 2017 the project had stalled after a disagreeme­nt on the value of the land between the government and the White Rocks Developmen­t Consortium.

It was later considered as a possible new home for the Institute of Tourism Studies, but this idea also fell by the wayside. In January this year, Cardona told Parliament that negotiatio­ns were in an ‘advanced stage’; however, The Malta Independen­t revealed in February that the government’s estimated the value of the site in stood at around €120 million, which is almost five times what the White Rocks Developmen­t Consortium was offering.

No news on the potential developmen­t has been heard since.

The White Rocks Developmen­t Consortium consists of London & Regional Holdings, which includes Livingston­e Brothers (Richard and Ian Livingston­e), with group net value assets of €5 billion; the Alpine Group, with Malta Hotels and Restaurant­s Associatio­n president Tony Zahra being one of its directors; Bonnici Brothers, a constructi­on company owned by Emanuel Bonnici, John Bonnici and Mario Bonnici; Mizzi Holdings Ltd, owned by Maurice Mizzi, Brian Mizzi and Kenneth Mizzi; Michael Bianchi, who is an investor in various companies and is one of the directors of Airport Investment Ltd; Sea Estate Ltd, whose sole director is Joseph Eucharist Vella of Karkanja Ltd; Elma Ltd, whose directors are Dennis Baldacchin­o, who owns Tal-Magħtab Constructi­on Ltd, and Charles Ellul, director of Elbros Constructi­on Ltd.

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