FAILED BAJA MARINA TURNS INTO "SUPERBANK"
For video visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch.php?v=O5rKfZ9ffBw
Santa Rosaliita, Mexico. January 10. In 2001, the Mexican Tourism
Development Agency (FONATUR) began construction of a yacht marina in the
sleepy Baja California fishing village of Santa Rosaliita, once known for
its long and playful right point waves. Soon after construction of the
marina began and the first breakwaters were put in place, sand began to be
deposited inside the harbor from winter surf and the howling winds that
buffet the area more than 150 days a year.

Five years later the sand has built up enough in front of the breakwater to
become the location of a new wave. During low tides and larger than average
winter swells, a 2-4’ right wall peels off the marina entrance.
Subsequently, the new break has now become one of the most popular spots for
traveling surfers in Central Baja. As a joke pro surfer Kyle Knox who first
surfed there last year, named the spot and its diminutive wave, the “Baja
Superbank.”
“I don’t like to expose new surf breaks in Baja, but the pressure by FONATUR
to expand the marina and begin a new round of dredging operations are
intense,” said Serge Dedina, Executive Director of WiLDCOAST, who has surfed
Santa Rosaliita since 1979. Dedina spent the first week of January surfing
the new break.

“The irony is that the new wave can’t begin to compare with what Punta Santa
Rosaliita or Sandy Point used to be like when it was one of the longest
waves in Baja. We are outing this spot to scare away future Baja marina
investors and discredit FONATUR,” said Dedina, “We don’t want the corrupt
agency to attempt to build anymore marinas on the Pacific coast of
Baja—especially at spots like Scorpion Bay, Punta Abreojos or at nearby
point breaks where a marina would ruin the surf. Considering that Harry’s in
northern Baja was just destroyed by the construction of a Sempra-Shell LNG
terminal that the Mexican Supreme Court had recently said violated Mexican
law, we need to very vocal in our opposition to any project that could
result in the loss of more Baja waves.”
The Santa Rosaliita marina was supposed to be the centerpiece for a $170
million dollar 27 marina mega-tourism project called the Escalera Nautica,
or Nautical Ladder, planned for Baja California and the Sea of Cortez.
FONATUR plans for yachts to dock at Santa Rosaliita and be hauled to Bahia
de los Angeles 70 miles across the peninsula on the Sea of Cortez. The Santa
Rosaliita project was the first of what was to be a chain of Pacific marinas
and mega-resorts planned for Colonet, San Quintin, Punta San Carlos, Punta
Canoas, Punta Abreojos, San Juanico (Scorpion Bay), and Magdalena Bay.

In January 2003, WiLDCOAST released a market study by EDAW of the FONATUR
Escalera Nautica marina project that showed that the Mexican federal agency
over estimated the demand for the marinas by 600%. Thanks to a media blitz
of the market study organized by WiLDCOAST that included a feature story in
the Wall Street Journal and extensive press, television and radio coverage
in Mexico City, FONATUR scaled back its plans for Pacific marinas. The
agency also agreed to work with environmentalists to focus on improving
existing marinas in Ensenada, La Paz, Los Cabos, Loreto and Mazatlan instead
of building new marinas in isolated parts of the Pacific and Sea of Cortez
coast.
More recently, however, FONATUR changed the name of its marina projects from
“Escalera Nautica” to “Mar de Cortez” and began once again investing public
funds into marina expansion and road development in Santa Rosaliita. Yacht
haul out parking areas have been installed along portion of the
Transpeninsular Highway from the L.A. Bay turnoff to the Santa Rosaliita
exit, even through yachts will never be hauled out at Santa Rosaliita.
Workers attempting to dredge the project admitted to WiLDCOAST that the
marina will never work.

“The entire Santa Rosaliita project is a sham, said Dedina. “The agency is
just attempting to save face with President Fox who visited Santa Rosaliita
in 2003. FONATUR is also attempting to show American investors that it has a
viable marina project.”
Last year, WiLDCOAST supported the work of a team of environmental attorneys
from the Northwest Environmental Law Center (DAN) in Ensenada and Mexico
City to file a lawsuit against another marina planned for Bahia de los
Angeles on the Sea of Cortez on behalf of local landowners. Fernando Ochoa
of DAN is concerned that the government could drop rocks at other locations
that FONATUR promised to halt marina projects at.

“We are continually monitoring all development in the region. So far
FONATUR has not obtained any permits for new marina construction, but the
unworkable marina at Santa Rosaliita demonstrates that the agency might do
anything at any time without proper permits,” said Ochoa.
For Dedina the marina is proof that, “Any surfer who thinks that the old
Baja of isolated wilderness waves will be around forever needs to get a
reality check. Baja is up for sale, and the Rosaliita marina is proof that
change is coming quickly. And sadly most of that change and coastal
destruction is and will be financed by U.S. investors, corporations and
developers.”
For now, traveling surfers have another spot to sample in Central Baja. And
locals from town have a new form of entertainment—sitting on the breakwater
and watching the show.
For video visit: http://www.youtube.com/watch.php?v=O5rKfZ9ffBw
Posted by WiLDCOAST on January 20, 2006 01:37 PM