New Fund to Safeguard Coastal Heritage Sites

Skellig michael kerry
Skellig Michael (photo Arian Zwegers)

More than €4m of European Union funds has been awarded to help safeguard heritage and coastal tourism sites in Wales and Ireland. Funded by the EU Ireland-Wales programme, the CHERISH project (Climate, Heritage and Environments of Reefs, Islands and Headlands) will support specialist organisations in Wales and Ireland to employ cutting-edge technologies to analyse coastal and island archaeology and maritime heritage sites, which are most affected by climate change, coastal erosion and rising sea levels.

It will fund new excavations, environmental studies, marine mapping and landscape modelling. It will also support future strategies for climate change by providing a deeper understanding of longer-term changes to Wales and Ireland’s heritage and coastal environments which attract thousands of visitors each year. The collaborative research has the potential to help safeguard coastal and heritage sites from the risk of climate change and minimise negative impacts on local economies.

Among some of the heritage sites under study in Ireland are the Saltee Islands (Wexford), Glascarrig Motte (Co. Wexford), Skellig Michael (Co. Kerry) and the Skerries Islands (Co. Dublin).

According to Paschal Donohoe, Irish Minister for Public Expenditure and Reform:

 “This project is an excellent example of how new technologies can be used to address emerging issues such as climate change and its impact on our shared heritage and marine environment. It also underscores the importance of cross-border cooperation and support from the European Union for such cooperation.”

Saltee islands
Saltee Islands (photo cosmo_71)

The five-year project will be led by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales in partnership with Aberystwyth University, the Discovery Programme: Centre for Archaeology and Innovation Ireland and Geological Survey, Ireland. In addition to €4.1m of EU funds, CHERISH has been co-financed by €1.1m from the participating organisations.

Christopher Catling, secretary of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales stated:

“This is an exciting new project. CHERISH brings a strong partnership of archaeologists, geoscientists and maritime specialists to bear on the significant challenges posed by climate change to the historic environment. The project will also enable us for the first time to undertake fieldwork on some of Wales and Ireland’s richest archaeological landscapes, which we believe will open up many new and exciting opportunities for coastal and heritage tourism across both nations.”

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