NISSOS SOFIA for Sale

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NISSOS SOFIA for Sale Nissos Sofia For Sale Greece, Ionian Islands, The Echinades POA € QUICK SPEC Year of Construction Bedrooms Half Bathrooms Full Bathrooms Interior Surface approx TBA m2 - TBA Sq.Ft Exterior Surface approx 176,000 m2 - 1, 894,448 Sq.Ft Parking Cars Property Type Private Island TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS This unique property comprises a private island in the centre of the ionian Sea. Named Nissos Sofia and part of the Echinades complex, the small island is a green paradise of protected natural environment. With a long sea front, gentle sloping terrain and proximity to the west coast of mainland Greece, The island has a surface of c. 176, 000 sqm; it is flat, with ample vegetation and all along its West coast it is covered by perennial cedars. The landscape is breath-taking, the sea shallow and as clean as it could ever be. The region has been designated as a RAMSAR site - a fact that ensures a high level of privacy and tranquility to its residents. There are valid certificates regarding the designation of shoreline, the forest/ non-forest areas, and the absence of areas of archeological interest. The island has obtained a number of certificates and has progressed planning status.. Large part of the island has been characterised as private forest land by the Forestry which offers immense privatcy and a serene natural environment. According to the building regulations, 6 houses of 130 sqm each can be built under its full development capacity. PROPERTY FEATURES BEDROOMS • Master Bedrooms - • Total Bedrooms - • Suite - BATHROOMS • Full Bathrooms - • Total Bathrooms - • Half Bathrooms - ISLAND FEATURES • Nissos Sofia and part of the Echinades,Situated between the islands of Ithaka (only 4 miles away) and Lafkada. • Long sea front, gentle sloping terrain and proximity to the west coast of mainland Greece • The island has a surface of c. 176, 000 sqm; it is flat, with ample vegetation and all along its West coast it is covered by perennial cedars. • Large part of the island has been characterised as private forest land by the Forestry which offers immense privatcy and a serene natural environment. According to the building regulations, 6 houses of 130 sqm each can be built under its full development capacity. • Telephone communication is via satellite phone or cellular phone. SCHOOL INFORMATION The schooling system in Greece is divided into three levels: Primary school (demotiko) ages 6 to 11. Middle school (gymnasio) ages 12 to 14. Senior high school (lykeion) ages 15 to 17. • Acs Athens • The British International School • International School of Athens • German School of Athens • Lycée Franco-Hellénique Eugène Delacroix • St Lawrence College • AMENITIES AND COMMUNITY FEATURES • There are no restrictions on buying property in Greece, While EU residents will run into almost no restrictions purchasing property on the islands, non-EU residents will need to prove both their connections to the country and their intent for property use OTHERS • Security System • Eco Friendly • Gardens • Private Island • Staff Quarters • Dock In • Mountain Views • Sea Views • Fly In • Private Beach ABAUT THE AREA Greece is a country in southeastern Europe with thousands of islands throughout the Aegean and Ionian seas. Influential in ancient times, it's often called the cradle of Western civilization. Athens, its capital, retains landmarks including the 5th-century B.C. Acropolis citadel with the Parthenon temple. Greece is also known for its beaches, from the black sands of Santorini to the party resorts of Mykonos. The Ionian Islands are part of Greece and lie off the country’s west coast, in the Ionian Sea. The northernmost island, Corfu, has an old town with Renaissance, baroque and classical architecture. Corfu also features the 19th-century Liston, a promenade on the central square, with arcades and cafes. The 15th-century Old Fortress is nearby. The Palace of St. Michael and St. George is home to the Museum of Asian Art. The Echinades are a group of islands in the Ionian Sea, off the coast of Acarnania, Greece. The archipelago is commonly subdivided into three groups: the Drakoneres in the north, the Modia in the middle and the Ouniades in the south .
Recommended publications
  • DESERTMED a Project About the Deserted Islands of the Mediterranean
    DESERTMED A project about the deserted islands of the Mediterranean The islands, and all the more so the deserted island, is an extremely poor or weak notion from the point of view of geography. This is to it’s credit. The range of islands has no objective unity, and deserted islands have even less. The deserted island may indeed have extremely poor soil. Deserted, the is- land may be a desert, but not necessarily. The real desert is uninhabited only insofar as it presents no conditions that by rights would make life possible, weather vegetable, animal, or human. On the contrary, the lack of inhabitants on the deserted island is a pure fact due to the circumstance, in other words, the island’s surroundings. The island is what the sea surrounds. What is de- serted is the ocean around it. It is by virtue of circumstance, for other reasons that the principle on which the island depends, that the ships pass in the distance and never come ashore.“ (from: Gilles Deleuze, Desert Island and Other Texts, Semiotext(e),Los Angeles, 2004) DESERTMED A project about the deserted islands of the Mediterranean Desertmed is an ongoing interdisciplina- land use, according to which the islands ry research project. The “blind spots” on can be divided into various groups or the European map serve as its subject typologies —although the distinctions are matter: approximately 300 uninhabited is- fluid. lands in the Mediterranean Sea. A group of artists, architects, writers and theoreti- cians traveled to forty of these often hard to reach islands in search of clues, impar- tially cataloguing information that can be interpreted in multiple ways.
    [Show full text]
  • The World View of the Anonymous Author of the Greek Chronicle of the Tocco
    THE WORLD VIEW OF THE ANONYMOUS AUTHOR OF THE GREEK CHRONICLE OF THE TOCCO (14th-15th centuries) by THEKLA SANSARIDOU-HENDRICKX THESIS submitted in the fulfilment of the requirements for the degree DOCTOR OF ARTS in GREEK in the FACULTY OF ARTS at the RAND AFRIKAANS UNIVERSITY PROMOTER: DR F. BREDENKAMP JOHANNESBURG NOVEMBER 2000 EFACE When I began with my studies at the Rand Afrikaans University, and when later on I started teaching Modern Greek in the Department of Greek and Latin Studies, I experienced the thrill of joy and the excitement which academic studies and research can provide to its students and scholars. These opportunities finally allowed me to write my doctoral thesis on the world view of the anonymous author of the Greek Chronicle of the Tocco. I wish to thank all persons who have supported me while writing this study. Firstly, my gratitude goes to Dr Francois Bredenkamp, who not only has guided me throughout my research, but who has always been available for me with sound advice. His solid knowledge and large experience in the field of post-classical Greek Studies has helped me in tackling Byzantine Studies from a mixed, historical and anthropological view point. I also wish to render thanks to my colleagues, especially in the Modern Greek Section, who encouraged me to continue my studies and research. 1 am indebted to Prof. W.J. Henderson, who has corrected my English. Any remaining mistakes in the text are mine. Last but not least, my husband, Prof. B. Hendrickx, deserves my profound gratitude for his patience, encouragement and continuous support.
    [Show full text]
  • BOTANY Research
    doi: 10.1111/njb.02156 00 1–12 NORDIC JOURNAL OF BOTANY Research 0 Determinants of alpha and beta vascular plant diversity in 61 Mediterranean island systems: the Ionian islands, Greece 65 5 Anna-Thalassini Valli, Konstantinos Kougioumoutzis, Eleni Iliadou, Maria Panitsa and Panayiotis Trigas 70 10 A.-T. Valli (http://orcid.org/0000-0002-2085-1174) ([email protected]), K. Kougioumoutzis and P. Trigas (https://orcid.org/0000-0001-9557- 7723), Laboratory of Systematic Botany, Faculty of Crop Science, Agricultural Univ. of Athens, Athens, Greece. – E. Iliadou and M. Panitsa, Division of Plant Biology, Faculty of Biology, Univ. of Patras, Patras, Greece. 75 15 Nordic Journal of Botany The Ionian archipelago is the second largest Greek archipelago after the Aegean, but the factors driving plant species diversity in the Ionian islands are still barely known. 2018: e02156 80 20 doi: 10.1111/njb.02156 We used stepwise multiple regressions to investigate the factors affecting plant spe- cies diversity in 17 Ionian islands. Generalized dissimilarity modelling was applied Subject Editor: Rob Lewis to examine variation in the magnitude and rate of species turnover along environ- Editor-in-Chief: Torbjörn Tyler mental gradients, as well as to assess the relative importance of geographical and 85 25 Accepted 19 November 2018 climatic factors in explaining species turnover. The values of the residuals from the ISAR log10-transfomed models of native and endemic taxa were used as a measure of island floristic diversity. Area was confirmed to be the most powerful single explana- tory predictor of all diversity metrics. Mean annual precipitation and temperature, as 90 30 well as shortest distance to the nearest island are also significant predictors of vascular plant diversity.
    [Show full text]
  • MSFD In-Depth Knowledge of the Marine Environment As the Stepping Stone to Perform Marine Spatial Planning in Greece
    water Review MSFD In-Depth Knowledge of the Marine Environment as the Stepping Stone to Perform Marine Spatial Planning in Greece Theodora Paramana 1,*, Aikaterini Karditsa 2, Niki Milatou 3, Stelios Petrakis 2 , Persefoni Megalofonou 3, Serafim Poulos 2 and Manos Dassenakis 1 1 Laboratory of Environmental Chemistry, Faculty of Chemistry, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 15784 Athens, Greece; [email protected] 2 Laboratory of Physical Geography, Faculty of Geology & Geoenvironment, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 15784 Athens, Greece; [email protected] (A.K.); [email protected] (S.P.); [email protected] (S.P.) 3 Section of Zoology-Marine Biology, Faculty of Biology, National and Kapodistrian University of Athens, 15784 Athens, Greece; [email protected] (N.M.); [email protected] (P.M.) * Correspondence: [email protected]; Tel.: +30-210-7274724 Abstract: The multiple anthropogenic activities taking place in the marine environment increase and create a high demand for maritime space. The pressures generated thereof on coastal and marine resources require an integrated planning and management approach. The MSPD (2014/89/EU) forms the legislative framework to regulate maritime activities and ensure a sustainable use of the marine environment. Based on the MSFD (2008/56/EC), the present study provides an overview of the state of the marine environment in Greece and the existing pressures while examining the potential contribution of MSFD knowledge to the MSPD implementation, identifying possible knowledge gaps Citation: Paramana, T.; Karditsa, A.; for the subsequent MSP process phases. It is supported that the MSFD constitutes the best available Milatou, N.; Petrakis, S.; scientific knowledge about the ecosystem and its dynamics, and provides an open access database Megalofonou, P.; Poulos, S.; which should be optimally used in the MSP process.
    [Show full text]
  • ATLAS of CLASSICAL HISTORY
    ATLAS of CLASSICAL HISTORY EDITED BY RICHARD J.A.TALBERT London and New York First published 1985 by Croom Helm Ltd Routledge is an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group This edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2003. © 1985 Richard J.A.Talbert and contributors All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publishers. British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data Atlas of classical history. 1. History, Ancient—Maps I. Talbert, Richard J.A. 911.3 G3201.S2 ISBN 0-203-40535-8 Master e-book ISBN ISBN 0-203-71359-1 (Adobe eReader Format) ISBN 0-415-03463-9 (pbk) Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data Also available CONTENTS Preface v Northern Greece, Macedonia and Thrace 32 Contributors vi The Eastern Aegean and the Asia Minor Equivalent Measurements vi Hinterland 33 Attica 34–5, 181 Maps: map and text page reference placed first, Classical Athens 35–6, 181 further reading reference second Roman Athens 35–6, 181 Halicarnassus 36, 181 The Mediterranean World: Physical 1 Miletus 37, 181 The Aegean in the Bronze Age 2–5, 179 Priene 37, 181 Troy 3, 179 Greek Sicily 38–9, 181 Knossos 3, 179 Syracuse 39, 181 Minoan Crete 4–5, 179 Akragas 40, 181 Mycenae 5, 179 Cyrene 40, 182 Mycenaean Greece 4–6, 179 Olympia 41, 182 Mainland Greece in the Homeric Poems 7–8, Greek Dialects c.
    [Show full text]
  • Sitecode Site Name Area Length Longitude Latitude
    SITECODE SITE_NAME AREA LENGTH LONGITUDE LATITUDE GR1110002 DASOS DADIAS-SOUFLI 41.017,00 E 26°18'0'' N 41°11'0'' GR1110006 DELTA EVROY 13.120,00 E 26°0'0'' N 40°52'0'' GR1110008 PARAPOTAMIO DASOS VOREIOU EVROU KAI ARDA 25.758,00 E 26°30'0'' N 41°30'0'' GR1110009 NOTIO DASIKO SYMPLEGMA EVROU 29.275,00 E 25°55'0'' N 40°58'0'' GR1110010 OREINOS EVROS-KOILADA DEREIOU 48.917,16 E 26°2'13'' N 41°13'32'' GR1120004 STENA NESTOU 8.752,00 E 24°43'0'' N 41°8'0'' LIMNES VISTONIS, ISMARIS-LIMNOTHALASSES PORTO LAGOS, ALYKI GR1130010 PTELEA, XIROLIMNI, KARATZA 18.221,00 E 25°7'24'' N 41°2'32'' GR1130011 KOILADA FILIOURI 37.502,00 E 25°48'0'' N 41°12'0'' GR1130012 KOILADA KOMSATOU 16.582,00 E 25°10'0'' N 41°14'0'' GR1140007 PARTHENO DASOS KENTRIKIS RODOPIS 569,00 E 24°30'39'' N 41°32'55'' DELTA NESTOU KAI LIMNOTHALASSES KERAMOTIS KAI NISOS GR1150001 THASOPOULA 14.606,00 E 24°48'2'' N 40°54'26'' GR1220005 LIMNOTHALASSA AGGELOCHORIOY 377,20 E 22°49'16'' N 40°29'3'' GR1220009 LIMNES VOLVI KAI LANGADA KAI STENA RENTINAS 15.671,00 E 23°27'57'' N 40°40'25'' GR1220010 DELTA AXIOU-LOUDIA-ALIAKMONA-ALYKI KITROUS 29.551,00 E 22°42'33'' N 40°31'21'' GR1220011 LIMNOTHALASSA EPANOMIS 690,00 E 22°50'0'' N 40°23'0'' GR1230003 LIMNI DOIRANI 2.146,00 E 22°46'0'' N 41°13'0'' GR1230004 LIMNI PIKROLIMNI-XILOKERATEA 2.043,00 E 22°49'0'' N 40°50'0'' GR1240001 KORYFES OROUS VORAS 40.328,29 E 21°52'21'' N 40°57'47'' GR1240002 ORI TZENA 12.580,50 E 22°10'43'' N 41°6'48'' GR1240006 LIMNI KAI FRAGMA AGRA 1.386,00 E 21°55'58'' N 40°48'29'' GR1250001 OROS OLYMPOS 19.139,59 E 22°23'29''
    [Show full text]
  • Investment Profile of the Region of Western Greece
    Region of Western Greece ‐ Investment Profile January 2012 0 Contents 1. Profile of the Region of Western Greece 2. Western Greece’s competitive advantages 3. Investment opportunities 1 1. Profile of the Region of Western Greece 2 Region of Western Greece : Quick facts Investment incentives quick facts Operational Program‘ Western Greece 2007‐ 2013 ‘: € 1,315 b New Investment law: Subsidies of up to 50% for business plans. Jessica Holding Fund: €15m • Western Greece is one of the thirteen regions of Greece. It comprises the western part of continental Greece and the northwestern part of the Peloponnese. • Main economic activities include agriculture and tourism services. Demographics and Workforce quick facts Population: 621,000 • As in many other Regions of Greece, production of wine and olive oil is significant. Dairy products are also important to the local GDP per Capita: 68.4% of the EU average economy as well as fish farming, unique to the area and a Contribution to Greek GDP: 5.12% (2008) traditional source of income. Total workforce: 316,000 • Western Greece is quickly becoming one of the top tourism destinations in Greece. The emergence of new hotel units and Unemployment rate: 16,1% new investments in the area have strengthened the local economy and are currently changing the overall profile of economic activity. Source: economics.gr, statistics.gr 3 2. Western Greece ’s competitive advantages 4 Western Greece has a breathtaking geography to offer •The Region of Western Greece is privileged in terms of the natural environment. The region accommodates many, various and significantly sensitive ecosystems. It is characteristic, that from the eleven wetlands of international importance that exist in Greece and who have also joined in the Ramsar agreement , the three are located in Western Greece Region.
    [Show full text]
  • Map 54 Epirus-Acarnania Compiled by W.M
    Map 54 Epirus-Acarnania Compiled by W.M. Murray, 1994 Introduction The first systematic investigations of north-west Greece were carried out during the nineteenth century by Leake (1835), Heuzey (1860), Lolling (1989, for work done in 1876-77), Oberhummer (1887), Partsch (1887; 1889; 1890), and Woodhouse (1897). Progressing slowly over the mountainous terrain on foot, these men recorded in detail many observations that still remain our best evidence for numerous sites throughout the region. In recent years, still more has been learned from the work of Hammond (1967), Dakaris (1971; 1972), Cabanes (1976; 1985; 1986; 1987), TIB Nikopolis, Murray (1982), Bommeljé (1987), Pritchett (1994; SAGT 7-8) and others, who often retraced the steps of the early travelers in their search for additional details. Through the combined results of these investigations, a reasonably clear picture has emerged which forms the basis of the map. Generally speaking, the region covered includes many small settlements (both fortified and unfortified) whose ancient names will never be known. My goal has been to include as many of these sites as possible in order to reflect more accurately the distribution of population, and to reduce the apparent significance of those small settlements whosenamesdohappentobepreserved.Inordertoavoidovercrowdingthemap(andthusrenderingit unintellgible), I have selected those sites that possess one or more of the following characteristics: a fortification wall sufficient to enclose at least 0.1 hectare; building foundations appropriate for a small settlement; and tombs in sufficient numbers to represent the cemetery of a settlement rather than, say, one family’s grave enclosure. The region also includes a great many fortresses and towers (cf.
    [Show full text]
  • Evaluation of the Flora and Vegetation of Trizonia Island – Floristic Affinities with Small Ionian Islands
    Evaluation of the flora and vegetation of Trizonia island – floristic affinities with small Ionian Islands KONSTANTINOS KOUGIOUMOUTZIS, ARGYRO TINIAKOU, GEORGIOS DIMITRELLOS & THEODOROS GEORGIADIS Abstract Kougioumoutzis K., Tiniakou A., Dimitrellos G. & Georgiadis Th. 2010: Evaluation of the flora and vegetation of Trizonia island – floristic affinities with some Ionian Islands. – Bot. Chron. 20: 45-61. The flora of Trizonia island (Corinthian Gulf, Greece) comprises 217 taxa, eight of which are under a protection status, while two are Greek endemics. Most of them belong to the therophytes and to the Eurymediterranean chorological group. The floristic affinities between Trizonia and the small Ionian Islands Paxoi, Othonoi, Ereikoussa, and Oxeia were examined by application of the Sørensen’s and Jaccard’s indices, in order to investigate the relationships between them and the islets of the W Corinthian Gulf. The vegetation survey revealed nine natural and three human induced habitat types, illustrated in the vegetation map of the island, given in the present study. K. Kougioumoutzis, A. Tiniakou, G. Dimitrellos & Th. Georgiadis, Division of Plant Biology, Department of Biology, University of Patras, GR-26500 Patras, Greece. E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] Key words: Phytogeography, Corinthian Gulf, vegetation mapping, Trizonia island. Introduction The study area represents the largest of the islands and islets of the Corinthian gulf and constitutes a continental type of island. Its distance from the mainland is 500 m, and has an areal extent of 2.56 km2 and a coastline length of 11 km. Trizonia island belongs to the prefecture of Fokida and lays ca. 30 km east of the city of Nafpaktos.
    [Show full text]
  • Seznam Řeckých Ostrovů
    Seznam Řeckých ostrovů Jonské ostrovy Rozloha Nejvyšší Délka Sousední menší Ostrov (km2) Vrchol Pobřeží ostrovy (m) (km) 1 KEFALONIE 781 1628 250 Atokos,Vardiani, Ithaka 2 KORFU 592 906 217 Othoni, Erikousa,Mathraki 3 ZAKYNTHOS 406 756 213 Marathonisi,Pelouzo, Ag.Ionnis 4 LEFKADA 356 1158 117 Madouri,Scorpios,Sparti,Meganissi 5 KYTHIRA 278 507 80 Drakonera,Antidrakonera,Prosonisi 6 ITHAKA 96 809 100 Ligia,Atokos 7 KALAMOS 24 754 30 Kastos 8 MEGANISSI 22 284 Kithros,Panagia 9 ANTIKYTHIRA 20 375 24 Prasonisi,Porio 10 PAXOS 19 248 22 Mogonisi,Panagia,Ag.Nikoalos 11 OTHONI 10 394 Mathraki,Diaplo,Diakoto 12 ANTIPAXOS 6 107 Daskalia 13 KASTOS 5 142 Další menší ostrovy (44): Ag.Nikoalos , Apasa, Ag.Ionnis , Arkoudi, Antidrakonera, Atokos, Drakonera, Dasklia, Diaplo, Diakoto, Erikousa, Filippos, Karlonisi, Kithros, Kalogiros, Kouneli, Lamprinos, Ligia, Madouri, Marathonisi, Mathraki, Mogonisi, Makri, Modio, Nera, Oxia, Petalas, Provati, Prasonisi, Porio, Panagia, Pelouzo, , Pontikos, Praso, Pistros, Skorpidi, Sparti, Scorpios, Sofia, Soros, Tsakalonisi, Vromas, Vidos, Vardiani. Egejské ostrovy Rozloha Nejvyšší Délka Sousední menší Ostrov (km2) Vrchol Pobřeží ostrovy (m) (km) 1 LESBOS 1630 968 320 Nisiopi, Barbalias, Aspronisos 2 CHIOS 842 1297 213 Oinouses, Pasas, Bartos,Psara 3 LIMNOS 476 470 260 Sideritis, Alogonisi, Koukonis 4 SAMOS 476 1433 159 Samipoula, Ag. Nikoalos, Makronisi 5 THASSOS 378 1204 95 Panagia, Kynira, Trasopoula 6 IKARIA 255 1042 102 Fourni, Thymena 7 SAMOTHRAKI 178 1611 8 AGIOS EFSTRATIOS 43 298 30 Ag. Apostoli, Roubos 9
    [Show full text]
  • Third Art/Science/Technology Workshop MEDEA2015; Media, Design
    BACK TO THE FUTURE Third art/science/technology workshop MEDEA2015; Media, Design, Architecture 6-12.09.2015, Zakynthos, Greece Back to the future In 1900 A.D., near the island of Antikythera, Greek diver Elias Stadiatos discovered an ancient shipwreck of a merchant ship There are concepts from distant past that are creating the that was carrying amongst others a mechanism that was later image of today and are present in contemporary art, science called Antikythera Mechanism. It was utilized for the calculation and technology. Ideas from pre-dogmatic times when diversity of Sun and Moon positions and phases of the Moon on the was respected, that are partially returning after thousands of Zodiac circle. The discs (interface) were based on two calendars: years with the echo of knowledge, like the poem of Lucretius "On Greek and Egiptian. It showed eclypses of the Sun and the Moon the Nature of Things" discovered on the beggining of based on the Babylonian Saros cycle. It retraced such details as Renaissance. Concepts that have shaped the theoretical model the irregular motion of the Moon, the locations of five known of reality verified experimentally by modern scientists. planets and rises and sets of stars. The mechanism is dated to 150 B.C. - 100 B.C. and is the most complex known mechanical In 1200 B.C. the kingdom of Odysseus with capital on the computation tool utill the early modern period. Ithaca island included other Ionian Islands, such as: Cephalonia, Lefkada, Zakynthos, Echinades and also a part of Programmable mechanisms developed by the human required Acarnania bordering with Aetolia by the Achelous River.
    [Show full text]
  • Inner Ionian Sea – Corinthian Gulf Deliverable C.1.3.8
    Addressing MSP Implementation in Case pilot area #4: Inner Ionian Sea – Corinthian Gulf Deliverable C.1.3.8. Co-funded by the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund of the European Union. Agreement EASME/EMFF/2015/1.2.1.3/01/S12.742087 - SUPREME ACKNOWLEDGEMENT The work described in this report was supported by the European Maritime and Fisheries Fund of the European Union- through the Grant Agreement EASME/EMFF/2015/1.2.1.3/01/S12.742087 - SUPREME, corresponding to the Call for proposal EASME/EMFF/2015/1.2.1.3 for Projects on Maritime Spatial Planning (MSP). DISCLAIMER This document reflects only the authors’ views and not those of the European Union. This work may rely on data from sources external to the SUPREME project Consortium. Members of the Consortium do not accept liability for loss or damage suffered by any third party as a result of errors or inaccuracies in such data. The user thereof uses the information at its sole risk and neither the European Union nor any member of the SUPREME Consortium, are liable for any use that may be made of the information The designations employed and the presentation of material in the present document do not imply the expression of any opinion on the part of UN Environment/MAP Barcelona Convention Secretariat concerning the legal status of any country, territory, area, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries. The depiction and use of boundaries, geographic names and related data shown on maps included in the present document are not warranted to be error free nor do they imply official endorsement or acceptance by UN Environment/ MAP Barcelona Convention Secretariat.
    [Show full text]