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Cadiz

3 bedroom Terraced Villa for sale in San Roque with pool garage – € 775,000

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Property in The San Roque Club Golf – Sotogrande – Cadiz The San Roque Club Golf is a private urbanization with two golf courses, a luxury hotel, sports facilities, equestrian club, private security and with all services less than 5 min. drive away. Quiet and peaceful urbanization, popularly known as the quiet Sotogrande. Sotogrande beach at 5 min. Alcaidesa beach at 10 min. and at 50 min. from Malaga international airport. The property corresponds to the first floor of a staggered building, so that the houses do not coincide on each other, only on the terraces. Constructed surface of 175… See full property details

Terraced Villa

San Roque, Cádiz

  3 beds

  3 baths

€ 775,000

3 bedroom Terraced Villa for sale in San Roque with pool garage - € 775,000



barbate

Illegal Housing Project Halted As Spain’s ‘surfer Paradise’ Coast Battles Wave Of Luxury Developments – Olive Press News Spain

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illegal-housing-project-halted-as-spain’s-‘surfer-paradise’-coast-battles-wave-of-luxury-developments-–-olive-press-news-spain

THE junta has halted an illegal urbanisation on rural land in the area of Ribera de La Oliva in Barbate, using orders for suspension of use for 53 plots. 

The inspection service of the Ministry of Development has carried out this intervention, with assistance from the Guardia Civil and Policia Local.

The urban plots have been laid out in a protected area, close to the sea and within the Easement Zone for the Protection of the Maritime-Terrestrial Public Domain, as the site borders the La Breña and Marismas de Barbate Natural Park.

READ MORE: GreenPeace and WWF team up to block reopening of ‘toxic water mine’ responsible for Andalucia’s worst environmental catastrophe – Olive Press News Spain

The houses are too close to a marsh, which poses a risk of flooding. (Photo: Pixabay)

Since the last inspections carried out in July 2024, 53 new illegal plots have been detected, where owners were fencing off land and constructing homes – most of them prefabricated.

All of this was taking place without any kind of permit or authorisation, and with full knowledge of the illegality.

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Andalucia

GreenPeace and WWF team up to block reopening of ‘toxic water mine’ responsible for Andalucia’s worst environmental catastrophe

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ENVIRONMENTALISTS are up in arms over plans to reopen a mine which ‘will dump billions of litres of toxic water’ into two of Spain’s UNESCO Heritage sites.

The infamous Aznalcollar mine, which caused Andalucia’s worst environmental catastrophe 27 years ago, received environmental authorisation from the Junta to begin business again in July 2024.

A coalition of pressure groups including GreenPeace and the WWF are urgently trying to block this development.

They fear an astounding 85.5 billion litres of toxic water will be released into the Guadalquivir River over the mine’s 17-year operational period if it reopens.

Such a discharge would threaten a number of popular Spanish hotspots including Sevilla, Cadiz and the Costa de la Luz.

“This would seriously contaminate the river with heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, lead, zinc, nickel, and selenium, from Sevilla to Sanlucar de Barrameda,” the groups warned.

Watchdogs have slammed the ‘woefully inadequate’ environmental studies that gave the mine the green light for ignoring the potential devastating consequences to La Doñana and the Guadalquivir wetlands – both UNESCO treasures that draw thousands of tourists annually.

Earlier this month, local mayors, farmers, fishermen, consumer associations, and medical professionals joined scientists and the Andalusian Ombudsman in demanding an independent expert committee to evaluate the contamination risks.

Compounding concerns, the 2015 mining rights awarded to Mexican firm Minera Los Frailes to reopen the controversial mine remain under judicial review.

A trial that began in March at Sevilla’s Provincial Court could even see those rights withdrawn entirely.

The environmental coalition is demanding the suspension of all mining authorisations until the trial is over and the creation of an independent commission to assess the environmental risks.

The original Aznalcollar disaster in 1998 released six million cubic meters of toxic sludge, contaminated 60 kilometres of the Guadiamar River, and cost Spanish taxpayers over €240 million in cleanup operations.

The company responsible, Swedish firm Boliden, never covered these costs.

The spill consisted primarily of heavy metal-laden sludge and acidic water that had been stored in the mine’s containment pond.

“That disaster remains vivid in Andalucia’s memory,” the environmental groups stated as the anniversary of the 1998 disaster approaches tomorrow (April 25). 

“The Guadalquivir River is not just a waterway—it’s the backbone of Andalucian identity. The Andalucian government must not fail again.”

The coalition consists of five leading environmental groups – Amigas de la Tierra, Ecologistas en Acción, Greenpeace, SEO/BirdLife and WWF.

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Andalucia

GreenPeace And WWF Team Up To Block Reopening Of ‘toxic Water Mine’ Responsible For Andalucia’s Worst Environmental Catastrophe – Olive Press News Spain

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greenpeace-and-wwf-team-up-to-block-reopening-of-‘toxic-water-mine’-responsible-for-andalucia’s-worst-environmental-catastrophe-–-olive-press-news-spain

ENVIRONMENTALISTS are up in arms over plans to reopen a mine which ‘will dump billions of litres of toxic water’ into two of Spain’s UNESCO Heritage sites.

The infamous Aznalcollar mine, which caused Andalucia’s worst environmental catastrophe 27 years ago, received environmental authorisation from the Junta to begin business again in July 2024.

A coalition of pressure groups including GreenPeace and the WWF are urgently trying to block this development.

They fear an astounding 85.5 billion litres of toxic water will be released into the Guadalquivir River over the mine’s 17-year operational period if it reopens.

Such a discharge would threaten a number of popular Spanish hotspots including Sevilla, Cadiz and the Costa de la Luz.

“This would seriously contaminate the river with heavy metals like arsenic, cadmium, lead, zinc, nickel, and selenium, from Sevilla to Sanlucar de Barrameda,” the groups warned.

Watchdogs have slammed the ‘woefully inadequate’ environmental studies that gave the mine the green light for ignoring the potential devastating consequences to La Doñana and the Guadalquivir wetlands – both UNESCO treasures that draw thousands of tourists annually.

Earlier this month, local mayors, farmers, fishermen, consumer associations, and medical professionals joined scientists and the Andalusian Ombudsman in demanding an independent expert committee to evaluate the contamination risks.

Compounding concerns, the 2015 mining rights awarded to Mexican firm Minera Los Frailes to reopen the controversial mine remain under judicial review.

A trial that began in March at Sevilla’s Provincial Court could even see those rights withdrawn entirely.

The environmental coalition is demanding the suspension of all mining authorisations until the trial is over and the creation of an independent commission to assess the environmental risks.

The original Aznalcollar disaster in 1998 released six million cubic meters of toxic sludge, contaminated 60 kilometres of the Guadiamar River, and cost Spanish taxpayers over €240 million in cleanup operations.

The company responsible, Swedish firm Boliden, never covered these costs.

The spill consisted primarily of heavy metal-laden sludge and acidic water that had been stored in the mine’s containment pond.

“That disaster remains vivid in Andalucia’s memory,” the environmental groups stated as the anniversary of the 1998 disaster approaches tomorrow (April 25). 

“The Guadalquivir River is not just a waterway—it’s the backbone of Andalucian identity. The Andalucian government must not fail again.”

The coalition consists of five leading environmental groups – Amigas de la Tierra, Ecologistas en Acción, Greenpeace, SEO/BirdLife and WWF.

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