Sunday, 24 March 2013

New study plans six wrecks for Gran Canaria

Arucas Council plan new wreck diving sites in Gran Canaria


In a bold new plan announced today and reported in 'La Provincia', the council in Arucas on the north coast of Gran Canaria have unveiled plans to sink six major wrecks in the area just off the shore, and create honeypot for diving in the North of the Island.

 La Asociación de Ciudadanos para el Desarrollo de Arucas y Norte de Gran Canaria (Aciudesa) (Association of residents for the development of Arucas and the North of Gran Canaria) have been working for over a year on the project and want to sink the first wreck fairly soon.   This will have to undergo a complete environmental clean first.

The plan is certainly ambitious, with a figure of 90,000 divers per year being targetted, each spending '1000€' per person to come and dive on the wrecks, and presumably the good citizens of the North expect that amount to be invested into the Arucas area.

But some simple maths suggests that at best these are wildly optomistic... 90,000 divers would mean  1730 divers per week, or about 250 per day,  and that would need a fleet of around ten big or twenty small boats to deliver them to the dive sites.    We already have 3 big wrecks in the North near Las Palmas - the Arona, the Kalais and the Frigorifica, and in the last ten years the numbers of people diving these on a daily basis must average only about ten to twenty, so a key question is why six more wrecks, even further from the main tourist resorts will be any more attractive than the ones we already have.

Still the University is lending support to the study .. lets hope they actually come and talk to some of the people who understand the tourist diving market in Gran Canaria, so that if it goes ahead they have an end to end plan with the full infrastructure to ensure that it is a great success for the Island.

As with many of these grand schemes, there can be a lot of talk, but in the end a sad retreat.   But what is important is that many of the local authorities have started to recognise the potential of Diving as a tourist industry, rather than simply as a recreational activity.   A few more of these 'not quite right' schemes will need to be floated and rejected before the right plan actually gets aproval and the first artificial wreck is sunk in Gran Canaria.




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