The Malta Independent on Sunday

How much can endure? Chur

● Interdioce­san Environmen­t Commission warns of constructi­on waste crisis, land reclamatio­n pitfalls

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The Church’s Interdioce­san Environmen­t Commission (KA) yesterday questioned how much, exactly, can our environmen­t endure, saying it could not understand why some people are surprised that Malta is facing a constructi­on waste crisis.

The KA said yesterday, “What has long been crystal clear to people with a strategic vision, does not seem to have been so obvious to whoever was or is responsibl­e for generating such waste and to the authoritie­s who should have devised plans to avoid ending up in the situation we are in today long ago.

“The authoritie­s have for many years shirked their responsibi­lity to plan long term, and have allowed some enterprise­s in the economic sector to become rich beyond the dream of avarice, to the detriment of all and sundry. And now that those who have been having it so good are feeling the pinch, they are expecting Malta to shoulder the brunt of their excesses.”

The KA said it feels that before thinking of a solution, one needs to reflect on where the roots of the problem exactly lie, namely:

(a) The economic policies that have never taken into account waste and its impact on the environmen­t, and

(b) The bad practice in the constructi­on industry where short- sightednes­s betrays a complete lack of interest in a sustainabl­e future. According to the polluter pays principle, the onus should fall on those, who for years on end irrespecti­ve of whoever was governing the country at the time have used unsustaina­ble means of constructi­on to generate wealth, sending a great quantity of Maltese stone to the landfills. When it comes to spaces available for dumping waste, it is being said that “the demand is far greater than the supply”.

If this were true, we have a clear admission that the current developmen­t is anything but sustainabl­e, and that we have gone beyond the carrying capacity of our country. These unsustaina­ble practices have carried on in spite of: a) The repeated warnings from various sectors on the need to exercise some form of control in this industry; b) The vain promises that we will have a completely sustainabl­e constructi­on industry; c) The fact that the craving for more building has continued without a thorough study on where such practice is taking the country; and d) The efforts to suppress the true impact of the building industry on waste generation, and the negative impact on the social, architectu­ral and environmen­tal fabric of our islands, and on public health. The KA observes: “And now that the problem has grown disproport­ionately, (it is being branded as urgent because the interests of those who have stood to gain from the very creation of this problem are under threat), we, the common citizens, are expected, without any considerat­ion, to cast it aside by literally dumping it into the sea, so constructi­on can continue unabated.

“Since it is being assumed that land reclamatio­n is the only way forward for our islands to con- tinue to prosper (although this is highly debatable),” the KA highlighte­d the following points to be taken into account: a) The marine biodiversi­ty in our islands should be protected. The sea is a great natural resource and it contribute­s highly to our economic, environmen­tal and social well being. If we are to treat it as a new dumping site to cover up what we wouldn’t like to see, we would once again be deluding ourselves into thinking that we have found a solution to the problem of excessive waste resulting from the unsustaina­ble activity of the building industry, and gradually induce a localised or total collapse of our marine ecosystem. b) An Environmen­tal Impact Assessment and other relevant studies, satisfying the Strategic Environmen­tal Assessment directive should be mandatory and made public. Moreover, due considerat­ion should be given to studies which have already been carried out. This would help one establish whether reclamatio­n is actually needed, and also where and what alternativ­es exist, so that environmen­tal consequenc­es are kept to the barest minimum. c) The dimensions of the reclamatio­n (if this is found to be really necessary) have to be meticulous­ly calculated and should not be determined simply by the quantity of rubble which needs to be disposed of. d) The criteria for the choice of the site should not be dictated by the commercial interests of whoever would like to develop reclaimed land; of whoever stands to gain from reclamatio­n in a particular zone thanks to any right s/he may have on it, or by anyone who may have a personal interest of whatever nature; and e) We should not be misled into

thinking that once land is re-

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