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Green Transportation Options in Cyprus

Green Transportation Options in Cyprus

Cyprus faces a unique transportation challenge. With 658 automobiles per 1,000 people, the island holds one of the highest car ownership rates globally. Only 3% of journeys in Greater Nicosia use public transport, while cycling accounts for just 2%.  i-ytimg-com This heavy reliance on private vehicles contributes to traffic congestion, air pollution, and carbon emissions. However, the island is actively developing sustainable alternatives through government initiatives, infrastructure improvements, and European Union support. Building a Greener Transport Network Cyprus has committed to ambitious environmental targets. The National Energy and Climate Plan aims to increase renewable energy sources to 23% of total consumption and 14% in the transport sector by 2030.  sb-cyprus The government launched Sustainable Urban Mobility Plans for Limassol and Larnaca, with a combined investment of over €100 million. These plans include 62 kilometers of improved transport corridors, dedicated bus lanes, cycling paths, three central bus stations, and four park-and-ride facilities. Larnaca began implementing its plan in late 2025, delivering new cycling lanes, redesigned bus corridors, improved pavements, and upgraded traffic systems through January 2027. dom-com-cy Cyprus Public Transport introduced the island's first electric buses in 2023. These Yutong buses measure 12 meters long, accommodate up to 80 passengers, and feature accessible seating with designated wheelchair areas. The company is developing an advanced energy management system that integrates solar photovoltaic…

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Lines and Nets: Fishing Traditions of Cyprus

Lines and Nets: Fishing Traditions of Cyprus

Fishing has shaped life along the Cypriot coast for thousands of years. From small family boats setting out before sunrise to modern vessels working farther offshore, the way fish are caught reflects deeper stories about culture, sustainability, and identity. This article explores how artisanal and industrial fishing coexist in Cyprus, why certain marine species matter so deeply to local life, and how food, regulation, and global recognition are reshaping the island’s relationship with the sea. adobe-stock-com Understanding the Two Worlds of Fishing At its simplest, fishing in Cyprus today exists in two parallel worlds. One is artisanal fishing, rooted in tradition, small-scale effort, and close ties to local communities. The other is industrial fishing, shaped by modern technology, larger vessels, and wider markets. adobe-stock-com Artisanal fishing usually involves small boats operated by their owners, often with help from family members. These fishers work close to shore, rely on experience passed down through generations, and bring back relatively small catches that are sold fresh, often the same day. Industrial fishing, by contrast, uses larger, motorized vessels and mechanized gear to harvest greater volumes of fish, sometimes destined for processing or export rather than immediate local consumption. Both forms are legal and regulated, and both contribute to the island’s food supply. Yet they differ not just in scale, but in how they…

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Community-Based Fishing Villages of Cyprus

Community-Based Fishing Villages of Cyprus

Along the Cypriot coast, fishing was never simply a job carried out at sea and forgotten once boats returned to shore. It was a shared way of life that shaped villages, relationships, and daily rhythm. In small coastal communities, fishing organised how people worked, ate, celebrated, and supported one another. Boats and nets mattered, but cooperation mattered more. Understanding Cyprus’s fishing villages means looking beyond catches and techniques to the social systems that grew around them and quietly endured. Adobe-Stock-com Villages Built Around Shared Work Community-based fishing villages developed where fishing was not an individual pursuit but a collective responsibility. Boats were small, crews were familiar, and labour depended on trust rather than contracts. Knowledge, tools, and effort were shared because survival demanded it. Cyprus’s coastline encouraged this structure. Shallow nearshore waters, sheltered bays, and predictable conditions suited small boats operated by families and neighbours. Fishing rarely rewarded isolation. Success came from working together, coordinating timing, and respecting unwritten rules shaped by experience. In these villages, fishing was not separate from life. It was life. A Way of Living Passed Down, Not Designed The roots of Cyprus’s fishing villages stretch back thousands of years. Archaeological evidence shows coastal communities relying on the sea from the Neolithic and Bronze Ages onward. Early fishers used simple vessels and local materials, learning quickly…

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