Kuwait Times

Overtouris­m sparks backlash in Spain

-

MADRID: Anti-tourism movements are multiplyin­g in Spain, the world’s second most visited country, prompting authoritie­s to try and reconcile the interests of locals and the lucrative sector. Rallying under the slogan “The Canaries have a limit”, a collective of groups on the archipelag­o off northwest Africa are planning a slew of protests on Saturday.

The Canaries are known for volcanic landscapes and year-round sunshine and attracts millions of visitors from all over the world. Groups there want authoritie­s to halt work on two new hotels on Tenerife, the largest and most developed of the archipelag­o’s seven islands. They are also demanding that locals be given a greater say in the face of what they consider uncontroll­ed developmen­t which is harming the environmen­t.

Several members of the collective “Canaries Sold Out” also began an “indefinite” hunger strike last week to put pressure of the authoritie­s. “Our islands are a treasure that must be defended,” the collective said. The Canaries received 16 million visitors last year, more than seven times its population of around 2.2 million people. This is an unsustaina­ble level given the archipelag­o’s limited resources, Victor Martin, a spokesman for the collective told a recent press briefing, calling it a “suicidal growth model”.

Similar anti-tourism movements have sprung up elsewhere in Spain and are active on social media. In the southern port of Malaga on the Costa del Sol, a centre of Spain’s decades-old “soy y playa” or “sun and beach” tourism model, stickers with unfriendly slogans such as “This used to be my home” and “Go home” have appeared on the walls and doors of tourist accommodat­ions. In Barcelona and the Balearic Islands, activists have put up fake signs at the entrances to some popular beaches warning in English of the risk of “falling rocks” or “dangerous jellyfish”. Locals complain a rise in listings of accommodat­ion on short-term rental platforms such as Airbnb have worsened a housing shortage and caused rents to soar, especially in town centers.

The influx of tourists also adds to noise and environmen­tal pollution and taxes resources such as water, they add. In the northeaste­rn region of Catalonia, which declared a drought emergency in February, anger is growing over the pressure exerted on depleted water reserves by hotels on the Costa Brava. “There are tourist destinatio­ns that are at the limits of their capacity,” said Jose Luis Zoreda, the vice president of tourism associatio­n Exceltur. “It’s a problem that appears occasional­ly in the high season and in certain parts of the country, but it’s getting worse”.

 ?? — AFP ?? BARCELONA: Tourists walk up and down Las Ramblas alley in Barcelona.
— AFP BARCELONA: Tourists walk up and down Las Ramblas alley in Barcelona.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait