Dubai Telegraph - 'We don't have time': Montenegro's bird haven fading

EUR -
AED 4.201704
AFN 75.510216
ALL 93.554547
AMD 419.194506
ANG 2.048232
AOA 1050.28288
ARS 1688.117497
AUD 1.639169
AWG 2.059378
AZN 1.947839
BAM 1.954799
BBD 2.306949
BDT 141.197698
BGN 1.964999
BHD 0.431881
BIF 3402.957471
BMD 1.144099
BND 1.476444
BOB 7.921552
BRL 5.834105
BSD 1.145428
BTN 110.355902
BWP 15.524254
BYN 3.318385
BYR 22424.343319
BZD 2.303651
CAD 1.606229
CDF 2585.663725
CHF 0.92517
CLF 0.026879
CLP 1057.867741
CNY 7.749269
CNH 7.753085
COP 3710.290658
CRC 520.535728
CUC 1.144099
CUP 30.318627
CVE 110.209048
CZK 24.227896
DJF 203.96823
DKK 7.475635
DOP 67.065658
DZD 152.199153
EGP 57.724261
ERN 17.161487
ETB 184.875348
FJD 2.565357
FKP 0.847742
GBP 0.849865
GEL 3.00321
GGP 0.847742
GHS 13.212292
GIP 0.847742
GMD 84.663531
GNF 10045.943648
GTQ 8.738716
GYD 239.638337
HKD 8.969909
HNL 30.670563
HRK 7.533663
HTG 149.703342
HUF 362.817904
IDR 20513.869355
ILS 3.475041
IMP 0.847742
INR 110.230005
IQD 1500.444792
IRR 1573136.329525
ISK 143.195245
JEP 0.847742
JMD 181.678557
JOD 0.811155
JPY 185.82058
KES 147.930214
KGS 100.051375
KHR 4625.631384
KMF 490.818393
KPW 1029.689312
KRW 1693.644271
KWD 0.353595
KYD 0.95452
KZT 539.348534
LAK 25854.630883
LBP 102567.093214
LKR 384.956055
LRD 207.319276
LSL 18.739168
LTL 3.378227
LVL 0.692054
LYD 7.328344
MAD 10.654591
MDL 20.108406
MGA 4908.550866
MKD 61.654924
MMK 2401.887276
MNT 4102.010061
MOP 9.249145
MRU 45.724786
MUR 53.944596
MVR 17.687798
MWK 1986.208976
MXN 19.957803
MYR 4.672044
MZN 73.119127
NAD 18.739168
NGN 1578.788553
NIO 42.148417
NOK 11.08667
NPR 176.565587
NZD 1.960597
OMR 0.439875
PAB 1.145413
PEN 3.881013
PGK 5.117424
PHP 70.416439
PKR 318.282492
PLN 4.332566
PYG 6946.53401
QAR 4.163886
RON 5.243412
RSD 117.354847
RUB 89.354996
RWF 1684.815179
SAR 4.286326
SBD 9.234438
SCR 15.362413
SDG 687.028721
SEK 11.050722
SGD 1.476586
SHP 0.854186
SLE 27.887447
SLL 23991.195508
SOS 654.57054
SRD 43.030691
STD 23680.542456
STN 24.487675
SVC 10.021956
SYP 126.459679
SZL 18.726656
THB 38.434292
TJS 10.566336
TMT 4.015788
TND 3.377085
TOP 2.754716
TRY 53.961097
TTD 7.780676
TWD 37.023509
TZS 3010.082499
UAH 51.119894
UGX 4226.854056
USD 1.144099
UYU 46.006643
UZS 13846.969991
VES 829.2886
VND 30062.921286
VUV 137.375511
WST 3.145715
XAF 655.612689
XAG 0.020576
XAU 0.000287
XCD 3.091985
XCG 2.064361
XDR 0.815393
XOF 655.629872
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.979993
ZAR 18.829721
ZMK 10298.262679
ZMW 20.989527
ZWL 368.399459
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    67.35

    0%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    22.1

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.4000

    82.51

    -0.48%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    13

    0%

  • BCC

    4.1500

    80.14

    +5.18%

  • RIO

    -2.9500

    90.67

    -3.25%

  • RELX

    0.5100

    34.02

    +1.5%

  • AZN

    0.9200

    169.29

    +0.54%

  • BTI

    4.4300

    63.16

    +7.01%

  • BCE

    0.5400

    22.14

    +2.44%

  • CMSD

    -0.0750

    22.31

    -0.34%

  • GSK

    1.3200

    52.77

    +2.5%

  • RYCEF

    -0.3900

    18.32

    -2.13%

  • VOD

    0.5400

    15.62

    +3.46%

  • BP

    -0.2500

    41.08

    -0.61%

'We don't have time': Montenegro's bird haven fading
'We don't have time': Montenegro's bird haven fading / Photo: SAVO PRELEVIC - AFP

'We don't have time': Montenegro's bird haven fading

Every year, tens of thousands of birds glide over the rusting remains of one of the Mediterranean's largest saltworks, to rest in the rare paradise it left behind.

Text size:

But experts warn the sprawling salt flats of Montenegro's Ulcinj salina, a vital stop-off for migrating flamingos, pelicans and other species, is fading fast.

The salt company closed 13 years ago and since then, environmental activists and former employees have pushed for the return of production to revitalise both the local economy and a key habitat that relied on industrial-scale saltwater pumping.

"If we wait, probably in three years, we will not have this landscape as we see it today," environmental activist Zenepa Lika told AFP as she stood above the overgrown channels which crisscross the site.

Salt production began in Ulcinj almost a century ago, when the natural lagoon was transformed into a network of shallow evaporating basins.

The unique conditions the process demanded -- pumping saltwater in and out to maintain a shallow depth -- were also the perfect environment for hungry wading birds.

As the industry boomed, birds migrating to and from Africa along one of Europe's key flyways were increasingly drawn to the area; today it is internationally recognised as a vital wetland.

But when the salt company shuttered in 2013, the pumping that maintained the basins stopped, endangering the environment the birds have come to rely on.

"We don't have time because every year that we are not working and we are not repairing the site, we are losing biodiversity," Lika, from the Dr Martin Schneider Jacoby Association which advocates for the salina, said.

- Mountains of salt -

For locals, the saltworks had also been a source of pride, a large employer and a rare example of industry co-existing with nature.

It survived the disintegration of Yugoslavia in the 90s, but collapsed when the company responsible for the site declared bankruptcy amid allegations of mismanagement.

"I remember that as a child I climbed up there, all the way to the main roof tile," former salt farmer Omer Hot said, gesturing at the seven-metre-high storehouse roof.

A dirty grey mound is all that remains of the salt mountains that once filled the building, now a weathered steel skeleton.

"I cannot describe it. I mean, it looks ugly, really ugly," the 69-year-old said, peering through its corroding gates.

- A shifting landscape -

But beyond the crumbling infrastructure lies a bird haven.

According to experts, the salina hosts more than one percent of the global populations of at least seven bird species.

Despite developers eyeing the prime real estate on the country's tourist coast, activists like Lika successfully pushed to protect the site, which is over four times the size of New York's Central Park.

In 2019, it was recognised as an internationally important wetland under the Ramsar treaty -- designed to protect key habitats around the world.

But official recognition as a protected area changed little on the ground, according to Lika.

"The crystallisation basins are covered by grass and sheath and so on. This is not the landscape that usually salinas are," she said, explaining the changes to the area that saltwork pumping created.

Earlier this year, Montenegro's government and the Ulcinj municipality announced a four-million-euro ($4.6 million) joint venture to run the area as a nature reserve and restart salt production.

The Balkan nation has even pinned part of its bid to join the European Union on reviving the site -- with environmental benchmarks required for membership closely tied to the salina's health.

-'Constant delay and aimless stumbling' -

But local journalist Mustafa Canka, who has tracked the project for years, said previous estimates put the cost of restarting the salt industry and preserving the salina at almost five times the earmarked amount.

"The decision-makers now know practically everything there is to know about the saltworks," the 57-year-old said, referring to the numerous studies and plans discussed by governments over the years.

"The only question is who will pay for production to restart," he said.

The "constant delay and aimless stumbling" around the project had made any planned recovery even more "painful, slow and difficult", as the town's experienced salt workers were now long retired or dead, he said.

"We need to draw on the knowledge of the people who once worked here, those who understand how the saltwork breathes," he said.

Neither the local nor the national government responded to AFP's request for comment regarding the salina's management.

As Lika watched black-winged stilts stalk through reeds in the shimmering sunset, she said the loss of what locals call "Heathrow" for birds, due to its stream of arrivals and departures, would impact well beyond Montenegro.

"If we don't work more seriously on the rehabilitation of this site, then we are going to lose one of the most important areas in Europe."

G.Gopinath--DT