The Japan Times - Sunbed wars: Greece tries to rein in beach chaos

EUR -
AED 4.232402
AFN 72.605135
ALL 95.706558
AMD 435.177963
ANG 2.062997
AOA 1056.804427
ARS 1603.618324
AUD 1.65557
AWG 2.077307
AZN 1.961597
BAM 1.95077
BBD 2.324606
BDT 141.624843
BGN 1.969908
BHD 0.435258
BIF 3416.39138
BMD 1.152459
BND 1.476094
BOB 7.975333
BRL 6.158091
BSD 1.154224
BTN 107.90279
BWP 15.738898
BYN 3.501695
BYR 22588.187959
BZD 2.321315
CAD 1.583305
CDF 2621.843157
CHF 0.911981
CLF 0.027088
CLP 1069.589781
CNY 7.936286
CNH 7.966405
COP 4260.1092
CRC 539.109991
CUC 1.152459
CUP 30.540152
CVE 109.98143
CZK 24.533526
DJF 205.530073
DKK 7.471942
DOP 68.513349
DZD 152.623121
EGP 60.197142
ERN 17.286879
ETB 181.899523
FJD 2.566755
FKP 0.863792
GBP 0.866148
GEL 3.128882
GGP 0.863792
GHS 12.58156
GIP 0.863792
GMD 84.702925
GNF 10116.915147
GTQ 8.841204
GYD 241.474254
HKD 9.021578
HNL 30.55076
HRK 7.529019
HTG 151.419589
HUF 394.161555
IDR 19583.728468
ILS 3.618257
IMP 0.863792
INR 108.26023
IQD 1512.001545
IRR 1516203.305264
ISK 143.803546
JEP 0.863792
JMD 181.335602
JOD 0.817081
JPY 183.766402
KES 149.356508
KGS 100.780082
KHR 4612.108414
KMF 492.099875
KPW 1037.217292
KRW 1743.629507
KWD 0.353563
KYD 0.96182
KZT 554.899281
LAK 24784.881075
LBP 103366.389324
LKR 360.048548
LRD 211.215415
LSL 19.47033
LTL 3.402911
LVL 0.69711
LYD 7.388949
MAD 10.785152
MDL 20.100001
MGA 4812.737286
MKD 61.570546
MMK 2419.531945
MNT 4110.76234
MOP 9.316479
MRU 46.201876
MUR 53.67017
MVR 17.817413
MWK 2001.500236
MXN 20.76932
MYR 4.540115
MZN 73.641731
NAD 19.470498
NGN 1570.755077
NIO 42.470497
NOK 11.143238
NPR 172.643369
NZD 1.989414
OMR 0.443096
PAB 1.154209
PEN 3.990411
PGK 4.982154
PHP 69.481575
PKR 322.260089
PLN 4.284921
PYG 7538.563017
QAR 4.220618
RON 5.096631
RSD 117.502393
RUB 94.692921
RWF 1679.399082
SAR 4.327407
SBD 9.279205
SCR 16.048454
SDG 692.627514
SEK 10.871545
SGD 1.480137
SHP 0.864642
SLE 28.321615
SLL 24166.492445
SOS 659.610746
SRD 43.202787
STD 23853.56558
STN 24.436993
SVC 10.098961
SYP 127.420483
SZL 19.477457
THB 37.970631
TJS 11.085917
TMT 4.04513
TND 3.408811
TOP 2.774843
TRY 51.089066
TTD 7.830742
TWD 36.992194
TZS 2990.629888
UAH 50.564363
UGX 4362.751341
USD 1.152459
UYU 46.509075
UZS 14071.718318
VES 524.012113
VND 30356.911174
VUV 137.403135
WST 3.143667
XAF 654.281394
XAG 0.018012
XAU 0.000271
XCD 3.114577
XCG 2.080119
XDR 0.813727
XOF 654.270069
XPF 119.331742
YER 274.978746
ZAR 19.805113
ZMK 10373.512186
ZMW 22.535895
ZWL 371.091189
  • RIO

    -2.5000

    83.15

    -3.01%

  • BCE

    0.0600

    25.79

    +0.23%

  • CMSC

    -0.2000

    22.65

    -0.88%

  • BCC

    -1.5600

    68.3

    -2.28%

  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • CMSD

    -0.2420

    22.658

    -1.07%

  • BTI

    -1.3500

    57.37

    -2.35%

  • RYCEF

    -1.2600

    15.34

    -8.21%

  • NGG

    -3.5400

    81.99

    -4.32%

  • GSK

    -0.5300

    51.84

    -1.02%

  • JRI

    -0.3900

    11.77

    -3.31%

  • AZN

    -5.3300

    183.6

    -2.9%

  • BP

    -1.0800

    44.78

    -2.41%

  • RELX

    -0.4600

    33.36

    -1.38%

  • VOD

    -0.0900

    14.33

    -0.63%

Sunbed wars: Greece tries to rein in beach chaos
Sunbed wars: Greece tries to rein in beach chaos / Photo: Sakis MITROLIDIS - AFP

Sunbed wars: Greece tries to rein in beach chaos

The waves of the Aegean Sea lap gently at the tables and chairs of two beach restaurants on Greece's Halkidiki peninsula.

Text size:

It is an idyllic scene, but one that is totally illegal.

Like many others in Greece, the two establishments on Pefkochori beach do not have a licence to set up shop so close to the water.

But after a wave of protests last summer by locals about bars and restaurants illegally covering beaches with sunbeds and tables, the Greek state is taking action.

It is cracking down on rogue tourist practices with surveillance drones, satellite imagery and a special app on which people can complain.

Pensioner Evgenia Rapti, who has a summer home near Pefkochori beach, is one of many outraged by the inexorable growth of Greece's tourism industry.

- Beach takeover -

"The whole beach has been taken over" with tables, chairs and deckchairs, the 64-year-old pensioner told AFP in the northern resort.

"When we bought our house 40 years ago, it was completely different," she recalled wistfully. "The beach was empty and it was nice to lie there."

Greece's travel sector has rebounded with a vengeance from the Covid pandemic -- but the downside is overtourism.

Last year, nearly 33 million people visited Greece, five million more than in 2022.

Renting two mattresses and a parasol for a day on the beach in Greece usually costs between 20 and 40 euros ($21-43).

Prices are much higher still on some top islands.

But a pushback has begun.

"The problem with beaches in Greece is entrepreneurs who, either with a permit or through encroachment, cover parts of the coast with sunbeds, umbrellas, tables and even permanent structures," said beach activist George Theodoridis, who is part of a Halkidiki group that has over 12,000 members on Facebook.

The first drone flights to spot the rule breakers in Pefkochori began in May.

And some 6,000 complaints from the public have been logged nationally on the new official MyCoast app since April, including 680 for the Halkidiki region east of the second city Thessaloniki.

"I can click directly in the app at the location where I am and file a report saying that (this private operator) does not have a licence," Theodoridis said.

Under the new rules introduced in March, umbrellas and deck chairs must be at least four metres from the sea. And no rentals are allowed on beaches that have less than four metres of sand.

In some cases, the added scrutiny has borne results.

On the popular tourist island of Rhodes, officials recently suspended the operation of a beach bar who had even put sunbeds in the sea.

- 'Order on the shore' -

"When we say there will be order on the shore, we mean it," said Finance Minister Kostis Hatzidakis.

His ministry expects to award more than 1,200 new beachfront leases this year in a bid to regularise the situation, on top of the 6,500 that already exist.

The new rules come after a backlash last summer that became known as the "beach towel movement".

It began on the Aegean island of Paros and spread nationally, with thousands protesting on illegally occupied beaches forcing the authorities to take notice.

But the new system is not without shortcomings.

Tourism operators say state services handling their applications are severely understaffed.

Anastasia Halkia, the mayor of the Halkidiki municipality of Kassandra, said inspections there that used to be handled by five local councils have fallen to two staff from the state land service, one of whom just retired.

"It's something new, so we are all moving gingerly to see how it goes," she said.

Sofia Papagiannidou, a 23-year-old tourism manager, said her company had submitted all the required paperwork -- but was still waiting even though the season was already underway.

"I have no faith in the Greek state," said another operator who declined to be identified.

"My business was fined 39,000 euros last year, and the procedure to collect the fine is still incomplete.

"So technically we have no licence to operate, but we are still working" unofficially, he said.

Y.Mori--JT