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Coin installs smart cameras in fight against fly-tipping and vandalism

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Coin has decided to get tough on fly-tipping with an extensive network of surveillance cameras to sort out their problem of illegal waste dumping, vandalism, and antisocial behaviour across the town. Coin local police and the council have announced the deployment of more than a dozen devices in strategic positions as part of efforts to better public safety and traffic management while encouraging responsible community habits.

Initial installations target problem locations

Work has started with a pilot scheme in Valdeperales before spreading to additional sites. Cameras now monitor areas including La Trocha, La Charca, the vicinity of El Rodeo sports centre, Alberquillas, Rincón, La Fuente, Cortijo Benítez, sections of the industrial estate, and roads such as Matadero and Antequera. Other units cover the Mijas road near La Fuente and Urique-El Rincon.

This first phase focuses on recycling points, rural entrances, and urban container zones where unauthorised deposits frequently occur. Teams will bring all twelve units online gradually over coming weeks.

Licence plate recognition behind enforcement

Equipment features advanced automatic number plate recognition together with artificial intelligence capabilities. Such technology allows quick identification of vehicles involved in illegal dumping or damage to public facilities. Local police and national security services gain valuable support when responding to reported incidents through faster evidence collection.

Francisco Santos, the mayor explained how the system tackles security concerns, protects public health standards, and directs bulky waste to the proper recycling centre instead of streets or recycling bins.

Ongoing waste management challenges remain

Council services already run double-daily refuse collections, especially in rural districts, and maintain regular street cleaning, pressure washing, disinfection, and pest control programmes. Despite these measures, the problem has become endemic, especially at out of town sites with some individuals and businesses still dumping furniture, construction rubble, and other unsuitable materials beside containers. These actions create extra costs, environmental risks, potential for wildfires, and visual pollution that affects everyone.

Education campaign complements camera rollout

Authorities are preparing a detailed information guide for residents explaining acceptable items for each container type and the need to take larger waste to the official tip. This idea means to prevent problems through better understanding rather than relying solely on fines or penalties.

Camera footage will also help track damage to bins and surrounding equipment. Officials describe the project as a deterrent that supports the vast majority of citizens who follow the rules and dispose of waste correctly.

Mayor of Alhaurin el Grande suggests dumping rubbish in doorway of local fly-tippers

aquifer

Coin residents campaign to protect Malaga aquifer from solar farms and adventure park plans

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Residents of Coin in Malaga province have built a broad grassroots movement to defend public lands that overlie their main aquifer. The effort targets two major development proposals that campaigners say endanger water supplies for the town and nearby areas in the Guadalhorce Valley, especially with regards to the final ownership and control of the water supply.

Solar farms planned across prime cereal lands

Seven photovoltaic plants grouped in four clusters could generate up to 560 MW on more than 1,000 hectares near the Sierra de las Nieves natural park. Promoters Natera Solar and Orla Solar, linked to investment funds Admiralty Management and Q-Energy, seek to cover roughly 1,300 hectares of dry farmland in Coin alone. The projects would also require a shared substation and a 25 km evacuation line to Cartama. But this is not mere nimbyism: this is about who owns the land that houses the water.

The developments would affect six areas: Alora, Alozaina, Cartama, Casarabonela, Coin and Pizarra. Perimeter fencing alone would stretch 80 km. Marisa Casal of the Asociacion Valle Natural de Rio Grande and the Plataforma Macro Renovables No network said the schemes threaten both energy sovereignty and food sovereignty. She said that impact studies predict a local temperature rise of 5°C and changes to the biosphere close to the unregulated Rio Grande, one of the few Malaga rivers with permanent flows that support essential flora and fauna.

Groups from Coin protest
Groups from Coin want their water protected.
Credit: Asociación Valle Natural Río Grande FB

Local farmer Huiquin Dong Lin, known as Maggie, said the land exists for cultivation, not solar arrays. Casal added that cultivated fields help offset emissions, whereas the funds behind the projects appear focused on creating a bubble to draw Next Generation EU money. The association maps between 600 and 1,000 large photovoltaic schemes across Andalucia and calls instead for council energy communities and rooftop self-consumption. Andalucia currently has only five such communities.

The adventure park proposal sits on an aquifer recharge zone

A separate 267 million euro scheme called Transcendence, promoted by Nature Call Initiatives and Grupo ARD Investment & Development, targets Los Llanos de Matagallar in Coin. The site forms the principal recharge area for the Sierra Blanca aquifer that supplies Coin’s 25,000 residents and surrounding farms. The project, declared a strategic investment by the Junta de Andalucia in July 2023, includes an artificial wave pool for surfing, two golf courses, adventure activities and additional solar plus biogas installations.

Maria Jose Romero of the Plataforma Ciudadana Mesa del Agua de Coin warned that construction risks contaminating the aquifer. She said the scheme offers no concrete measures to prevent leaks or protect groundwater despite claims of water-efficient design through storm-water basins. The promoters describe the plan as high-quality inland tourism and ecotourism, yet it would occupy land long used for agriculture in an area known as the pantry of Malaga.

Accusations of missing studies and skipped consultations

Campaigners from both platforms accuse authorities of selling or reclassifying public land without publishing full environmental impact assessments or legal acquisition documents. They say compulsory public consultations never took place. Fears continue of forced expropriations of smallholdings through offers that mask compulsory purchase at set prices. Casal noted rising cereal prices together with growing imports while farmland disappears under panels or park infrastructure.

Regional authorities seek breathing space on renewables

More than 100 photovoltaic projects are under consideration across Malaga province, which receives over 3,000 sunshine hours annually. The Diputacion de Malaga approved a unanimous motion calling for a moratorium on new large schemes where local councils request one. Several mayors, including Antonio Perez of Alozaina, have signed joint letters expressing concern for agriculture, inland tourism and landscape quality. Alora town hall recently imposed a one-year ban on photovoltaic parks.

Earlier resistance stopped a proposed dam on the Rio Grande more than 15 years ago under the slogan “Rio Grande Vivo, No a los tubos”. Campaigners say similar vigilance is required now because rivers play a central role in aquifer recharge, ecosystem links and local identity in a region already under drought decrees.

Demands focus on protection and decentralised energy

The Mesa del Agua and Valle Natural de Rio Grande are calling on the Junta de Andalucia to prioritise aquifer safeguards and reject fast-track approvals that bypass rigorous environmental checks. They advocate energy communities in every area, placement of renewables on already altered urban or industrial sites, and genuine public participation in territorial energy planning.

Petitions have reached the European Parliament and Commission, which referred the aquifer issue back to national authorities.

Coin’s campaign forms part of wider networks across Malaga that reject the idea of rural areas becoming sacrifice zones. Participants stress that water remains essential and scarce in the Guadalhorce Valley. They continue administrative and legal actions while pressing for a model that keeps farmland productive, maintains biodiversity and supplies clean water to current and future residents.

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Alhaurin El Grande

Alhaurin el Grande and Coin launch historic 1.5 million kilo season for premium tomato

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Farmers and food producers in Alhaurin el Grande and Coin have officially launched the historic 2026 harvest of the region’s most famous gourmet vegetable. The Tomate Huevo Toro. Recent rainfall has finally brought an end to a punishing dry spell across the Guadalhorce Valley, clearing the way for an incredible 1.5 million kilograms of this luxury crop to hit local markets this summer.

Known affectionately to locals as the “King of the Orchard,” a variety of heirloom tomato is massive in size, has a rich meaty texture, and rugged, heart-like shape appearance.

A bumper crop for Andalucian farmers

Growers estimate that roughly 230,000 individual plants have been cultivated across traditional bancales, the stepped, terraced plots carved into the regional hillsides.

The official summer campaign kicked off with a special tour of a heritage orchard in Alhaurin el Grande, where town mayor Anthony Bermudez praised local families for safeguarding the traditional agricultural landscape. This heritage farming method relies entirely on a labour-intensive encañado system, where farmers hand-build structures out of wild river reeds to support the immense weight of the plants. Even though the outdoor weather conditions mean the harvest is arriving slightly later than usual, agricultural experts confirm the quality is exceptional, reinforcing its reputation as one of the most exclusive tomato varieties in the world.

Creative cold soups celebrate the launch

Following the farm tour in Alhaurin el Grande, the foody festivities moved over to the neighbouring Coin Agro-food Market. Top local chefs gathered to showcase diverse interpretations of gazpacho. Dishes ranged from a rustic, hand-crushed gazpacho majao blended with fresh seasonal fruit, to more modern, contemporary variations using strawberries and local goat’s cheese.

Another traditional favourite was porra, a much thicker, creamier cousin of gazpacho originating from nearby Antequera. Unlike drinkable gazpacho, porra is a dense puree created by pounding sourdough bread, fresh garlic, and extra virgin olive oil together, which is eaten with a spoon and typically garnished with hard-boiled egg and cured Spanish ham.

Summer events for food lovers

More than 2,000 local families depend heavily on this single seasonal harvest, which proudly carries the Sabor a Malaga (Taste of Malaga) regional quality brand. International residents and visiting food lovers can follow a month-long gastronomic restaurant route running across the province from July 31 to August 31.

Key dates for tomato fan’s diaries include a cultural evening on July 23 at the Antonio Gala House Museum in Alhaurin el Grande, followed by a charity golf tournament at Alhaurin Golf on the final Saturday of July. The seasonal festivities will conclude in Coin with the Verbena Tomatera, open-air summer street festival on August 13 and 14, and then the cherry on the cake, the famous annual tomato auction on August 15 in the town’s Parque de San Agustin, where last year’s event saw a small box of tomatoes sold for a record €18,000.

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Historic 1.5 Million Kilo Season For Tomato

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historic-1.5-million-kilo-season-for-tomato

Farmers and food producers in Alhaurin el Grande and Coin have officially launched the historic 2026 harvest of the region’s most famous gourmet vegetable. The Tomate Huevo Toro. Recent rainfall has finally brought an end to a punishing dry spell across the Guadalhorce Valley, clearing the way for an incredible 1.5 million kilograms of this luxury crop to hit local markets this summer.

Known affectionately to locals as the “King of the Orchard,” a variety of heirloom tomato is massive in size, has a rich meaty texture, and rugged, heart-like shape appearance.

A bumper crop for Andalucian farmers

Growers estimate that roughly 230,000 individual plants have been cultivated across traditional bancales, the stepped, terraced plots carved into the regional hillsides.

The official summer campaign kicked off with a special tour of a heritage orchard in Alhaurin el Grande, where town mayor Anthony Bermudez praised local families for safeguarding the traditional agricultural landscape. This heritage farming method relies entirely on a labour-intensive encañado system, where farmers hand-build structures out of wild river reeds to support the immense weight of the plants. Even though the outdoor weather conditions mean the harvest is arriving slightly later than usual, agricultural experts confirm the quality is exceptional, reinforcing its reputation as one of the most exclusive tomato varieties in the world.

Creative cold soups celebrate the launch

Following the farm tour in Alhaurin el Grande, the foody festivities moved over to the neighbouring Coin Agro-food Market. Top local chefs gathered to showcase diverse interpretations of gazpacho. Dishes ranged from a rustic, hand-crushed gazpacho majao blended with fresh seasonal fruit, to more modern, contemporary variations using strawberries and local goat’s cheese.

Another traditional favourite was porra, a much thicker, creamier cousin of gazpacho originating from nearby Antequera. Unlike drinkable gazpacho, porra is a dense puree created by pounding sourdough bread, fresh garlic, and extra virgin olive oil together, which is eaten with a spoon and typically garnished with hard-boiled egg and cured Spanish ham.

Summer events for food lovers

More than 2,000 local families depend heavily on this single seasonal harvest, which proudly carries the Sabor a Malaga (Taste of Malaga) regional quality brand. International residents and visiting food lovers can follow a month-long gastronomic restaurant route running across the province from July 31 to August 31.

Key dates for tomato fan’s diaries include a cultural evening on July 23 at the Antonio Gala House Museum in Alhaurin el Grande, followed by a charity golf tournament at Alhaurin Golf on the final Saturday of July. The seasonal festivities will conclude in Coin with the Verbena Tomatera, open-air summer street festival on August 13 and 14, and then the cherry on the cake, the famous annual tomato auction on August 15 in the town’s Parque de San Agustin, where last year’s event saw a small box of tomatoes sold for a record €18,000.

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