Salvem o surf explained

Salvem o surf
Abbreviation:S.O.S.
Formation:2002
Type:NGO
Website:http://salvemosurf.org/sos/

S.O.S. Salvem O Surf (Save the Surf) is an environmental non-governmental organisation in Portugal, with a strong technical profile, that aims to solve problems and issues related with Surfing but also to develop the sport. It strives to solve problems constructively, guided by the need to raise awareness of the value of surf, and the will to create added value to all the involved parties.

S.O.S. Salvem O Surf as a spontaneous popular movement was born with SOS Santo Amaro at the end of 2002 with the objective to protect the wave of Santo Amaro de Oeiras, the only surfing alternative in the Lisbon region in days of strong stormy SW winds. The movement achieved an agreement with the Oeiras Town Hall that allowed the preservation of 70% of the wave extension area.

Guiding principles

S.O.S. Salvem O Surf actions are guided by well defined principles of Protection and Development of surfing

Protection

  1. Protecting and preserving beaches and waves for surfing.
  2. Creating National and World Surfing Reserves.
  3. Inclusion of surf in Environmental Impact Studies.
  4. Environmental monitoring and care of water quality.
  5. Correcting coastal work projects whenever there is a real threat to surfing.
  6. Preservation of surfing in projects related with the energy of waves.
  7. Safeguarding the public access to waves (preventing the privatisation of accesses and coast).

Development

  1. Creation of artificial reefs that can be used for surfing.
  2. Promotion and support of studies that sustainably promote the development of surfing.
  3. Monitoring and characterisation of beaches and waves for surfing.
  4. General social-economic studies aiming at better understanding the potential of surfing.
  5. Saving lives of both surfers and swimmers, endangered by rip currents or coastal works.

Team

At the core of S.O.S. there is a team, with diverse capabilities in sports, scientific and business skills, based in the best waves and schools. Namely, S.O.S. is unique and different from other surf/ocean NGO and associations as its technical team is at the forefront of studies in coastal engineering and environment, artificial reef projects, surf-economics, social politics and is, thus, able to solve problems of wave preservation from the onset, directly proposing surfing friendly solutions to local and national government, population and coastal work promoters.

S. O. S. started as a civic and informal surfer movement in 2002–2003 to preserve beaches and waves for surfing from coastal works who ignored surfing. The civic movement was initially coordinated by Pedro Bicudo (PhD, Physicist), Paula Marques Figueiredo (PhD, Geologist) and by Pedro Monteiro (Civil and Coastal Engineer). In 2008/2009 the same team, including also Guilherme Garcia, upgraded S. O. S. to a legal surfer's Association in order to improve the protecting and developing of surfing.

Since 2010 a new board is directing and further upgrading S. O. S.

History

In the 2000 decade, partly boosted by the European Union Structural Funds and Cohesion Funds, the number of coastal engineering works increased dramatically in the Portuguese coast, to develop harbours or to protect the coast. However, in general, the Environmental Impact Accessment of these coastal constructions ignored to study the respective impacts on surfing. S.O.S. started as a civic and informal surfer movement in 2002/2003 to preserve beaches and waves for surfing from these coastal works who ignored surfing. In 2008/2009, S.O.S. turned legal, as a non-profit surfer's Association in order to improve the protecting and developing of surfing. S.O.S. is further being upgraded to an Environmental Non-Governmental Organization, since the surf and beach damaging coastal works continue being constructed. S. O. S. has been organizing campaigns to protect the coast since 2002.

2002

Santo Amaro S.O.S. came to life from a group of surfers to defend the only wave near Lisbon that works with SW storms and, for the first time in Portugal, technical reasoning was used to convince the Harbour of Lisbon and the local Municipality of Oeiras that the peer would damage the wave and would not have the desired protective effect. These entities have changed the project and build a peer with only half of the length preserving 70% of the wave extension.

2003

Carcavelos – in February, S.O.S. campaigned to converge more than 5.000 surfers to this beach break to ask the Municipality of Cascais not to build groins to contain the sands (again, technical proof was given that this was not an efficient solution). With a 100% success, the wave was fully preserved. Moreover, S.O.S. was awarded a medal by the Municipality for its actions in “protection of nature and the environment”.

2003 and 2006

Costa da Caparica – in June 2003, local surf clubs have asked S.O.S. to help them making a case for the beach sand nourishment to protect the coast line. Despite giving technical evidence the Municipality has not heard the surfers and in 2006 the dunes were damaged by storms and high tides, leading to an expensive and urgent beach nourishment and sea wall increase. Costa da Caparica Erosion continues in Costa da Caparica and S.O.S. considers that the present groin and sea wall defence of is not sustainable.

2003 and 2008

Jardim do Mar- S.O.S. supported technically in 2003 the civic movement for the preservation of Jardim do Mar, led by the environmental associations Save the Waves Coalition, Quercus and Cosmo. S.O.S. and has been repeatedly advocating the construction of Multi-purpose Reefs, however composed of rock since rock is the local natural substrate, to recover the damaged waves of Jardim do Mar, Lugar de Baixo and Ponta Delgada in the island of Madeira. However the Regional Government of Madeira has not yet chosen to recover the damaged waves.

2006

S.Pedro do Estoril – As a result of the preserving of Carcavelos Beach, the Cascais Municipality has requested a study for an artificial reef to improve surf conditions in S.Pedro do Estoril. The members of the Technical team of SOS also motivated some of the best Science and Engineering Institutions of Portugal, Instituto Superior Técnico, Faculdade de Ciências da Universidade de Lisboa and Laboratório Nacional de Engenharia Civil, to join the Cascais Municipality in the artificial surfing reef study.

2008

Carcavelos – In July 2008, together with the event organizer Ceativa, S.O.S. created a Giant Logo, composed by surfers, their surfboards and bodyboards, with giant human capital letters SOS. The logo included 96 surfers and bodyboarders. In 2009 the Giant Logo was repeated at Carcavelos and at Figueira da Foz. The S.O.S. Giant Logo is a remarkable symbol of S. O. S. with a large symbolic impact in the media and in the public.

2009

Cabedelo, Figueira da Foz – S.O.S. was called to give technical support to a locals surfer movement that wanted to impede the extension of a peer north of the Mondego River threatening this world class wave. S.O.S. has also given support to create a massive Giant Logo, composed of 200 surfers, in the water.

Casualties

In addition, S.O.S. members have been, or are still, involved in many other threatened waves, with mixed results::

Lost waves

Portugal loses, on average, one world quality wave per year.

SURF SPOT REGION MAIN QUALITIES CONSTRUCTION TYPE YEAR SOS TEAM PROJECTED LOSS FINAL LOSS
Pico de Rabo de Peixe Azores Big and long Fishing harbour jetty 2000 4 100% 100%
Lugar de Baixo right Madeira Tubular and long Sea wall for marina 2001 2 100% 40%
Kirra right Alentejo Tubular and long Commercial harbour jetty 2002 1 100% 100%
Santo Amaro de Oeiras Lisboa Tubular and long Jetty for beach nourishment 2003 20 50% 30%
Points of Costa de Caparica Lisboa Multiple beach breaks Beach nourishment 2004 6 20% 10%
Jardim do Mar right Madeira Big and long Sea wall for coastal protection 2005 2 50% 50%
Points of Carcavelos Lisboa Beach break tubular Groins for beach nourishment 2005 30 30% 0%
Ponta Delgada left Madeira Big and long Swimming pool with jetty 2005 2 100% 100%
Cabedelo of Douro left Porto Tubular Jetty for coastal protection 2006 1 100% 100%
Cabedelo of Figueira da Foz left Center Big and long Commercial harbour jetty 2009 12 50% 50%
Pico de Santa Catarina Azores Tubular Commercial harbour jetty 2010 2 100% -%
S. Torpes Alentejo Beach break Commercial harbour jetty 2011 4 50% -%
Rabo de Peixe left Azores Long Fishing harbour jetty 2010 4 100% -%

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Viability Study of an Artificial Surf Reef in S. Pedro do Estoril, Cascais, Portugal" Pedro Bicudo, Margarida Custódio, Nuno Cardoso Conceição Fortes, Maria da Graça Neves, Lourenço Mendes, Pedro Monteiro, Artur Palha Maria João Nogueira and Luis Miguel Carvalho, presented in ISOPE 2008, Vancouver (2008)
  2. "An Artificial Surfing Reef in São Pedro do Estoril Beach, Portugal. Numerical and Physical Modeling studies" by Conceição Juana Fortes, Maria Graça Neves, Liliana Pinheiro, Lourenço Mendes, Pedro Monteiro, Artur Palha, Pedro Bicudo and Nuno Cardoso, presented in ICCE 2008, Hamburg (2008)
  3. "Integrating Surfing in the Socio-economic and Morphology and Coastal Dynamic Impacts of the Environmental Evaluation of Coastal Projects", by Pedro Bicudo and Ana Horta, Presented in ICS 2009, Lisboa (2009)