Protest action on the Albanian Shushica River

++ The entire valley of the Shushica stands up against the diversion of its water ++ Albanian government wants to drain the water from the Vjosa tributary ++ Vjosa National Park in danger after just one year ++

People with Albanian flags and megaphones stand on a bridge during a protest by mayors and residents of the Shushica Valley.

Protest by mayors and residents of the Shushica Valley on 24 February

© Joshua David Lim
Excavator during construction work on the Himara Water Extraction Project on the Shushica River

Construction work for the Himara Water Extraction Project on the Shushica River

© Ulrich Eichelmann
The Ottoman bridge crosses the Shushica near Brataj.

The Shushica near the village of Brataj, about 10 kilometers from the planned water intake. In the future, the old Ottoman bridge could cross a dry riverbed.

© Ulrich Eichelmann

Joint press release from EuroNatur, Riverwatch and EcoAlbania

Radolfzell, Vienna, Tirana, Kuç. 12 mayors and numerous other residents of the Shushica Valley and other regions of the Vjosa National Park, activists, lawyers and scientists gathered this morning in the village of Kuç on the banks of the Shushica River. They are protesting the plans of the government in Tirana to take the water from the Shushica and channel it to the Mediterranean coast 17 kilometres away in Himara to promote mass tourism there.

Officially declared in March 2023, the Vjosa Wild River National Park encompasses the Vjosa and its key tributaries, including the Shushica. However, less than a year later, the Shushica faces potential removal from protected status, leading to the "amputation" of the Vjosa National Park. The proposed withdrawal of 140 litres of water per second from the Shushica would completely dry up the upper river reaches during summer. This poses a significant threat to biodiversity and has severe repercussions for the local population in around 30 affected villages. The intervention may lead to the exclusion of the Shushica from the national park, as such measures are prohibited in this protection category, depriving the local community of the benefits of ecotourism.

"We had high hopes for the national park as we anticipated it would boost economic development. Given our region's challenges with emigration, establishing the national park held the promise of transformative change for us. However, if our water is now taken away and Shushica loses its national park status, our economic future will be at stake", says Elidon Kamaj, mayor of Brataj village.

The nature-destroying project has so far also been financed with German taxpayers' money, namely with funds from the Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau on behalf of the Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development (BMZ) and the Western Balkans Investment Framework (WBIF). The ministries' approvals and the financing were based on a completely flawed environmental and social impact assessment (ESIA). The consequences of the project for the Shushica were not analysed, and the people living along the Shushica were not informed. National and international scientists who reviewed these analyses concluded: “… the results are misleading and incorrect.” (see attachement).

"The risk lies in the potential for the water diversion on the Shushica to set a precedent. The actions unfolding today on the Shushica might repeat tomorrow in other sections of the national park. The credibility of the entire Wild River National Park is at stake," says Olsi Nika, Executive Director of EcoAlbania.

"The Wild River National Park is based on a largely natural, undisturbed water balance in its network of veins. This is what makes this area so unique, which is why people from all over Europe come here. This diversion project, therefore, jeopardises the entire national park. Germany and the WBIF must withdraw from the project if Albania does not stop the construction work immediately and order a real EIA," says Ulrich Eichelmann, Executive Director of Riverwatch.

"The Albanian government has probably assumed that we will turn a blind eye to one or two nature-destroying projects in return for the designation of the Vjosa National Park, but we will not compromise. We will not give up until the Vjosa and its tributaries are truly safe!" says Annette Spangenberg, Head of Nature Conservation at EuroNatur.

The joint demands of the local residents, mayors, scientists and activists can be summarised as follows:
1. Halt construction immediately.
2. Conduct a new environmental impact assessment.
3. Identify and analyse alternative water resources for the coastal area around Himara a spart of the EIA, with the help of national and international experts.

Background information:

  • In March 2023, the Vjosa National Park was established in Albania, Europe's first wild river conservation area, which encompasses a total of 404 kilometres of the Vjosa river network with its tributaries Shushica, Drino and Bënça. After less than a year, the national park is now in danger; construction work is already well advanced and is due to be completed in August this year. 
  • The "Save the Blue Heart of Europe" campaign aims to protect rivers with particularly high natural value on the Balkan Peninsula, which are threatened by more than 3,400 hydropower projects and other nature-destroying plans. The campaign is coordinated by the international nature conservation organisations Riverwatch and EuroNatur and implemented together with partner organisations in the Balkan countries. The local partner in Albania is EcoAlbania. Further information can be found at https://balkanrivers.net The campaign is supported by the Manfred-Hermsen-Stiftung, among others.

 

Media contact::

Christian Stielow - EuroNatur, christian.stielow(at)euronatur.org, Tel.: +49 (0)7732 – 92 72 15
Ulrich Eichelmann – Riverwatch, ulrich.eichelmann(at)riverwatch.eu, Tel.: +43 676 6621512
Besjana Guri – EcoAlbania, b.guri(at)ecoalbania.org, Tel.: 0035/692954214

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