SPAIN is rolling out a sleek new traffic sign that spells trouble for anyone tempted to jump a red light.
The sign marks the presence of a sophisticated new photo-red radar system set to be rolled out at traffic lights across the country – and they’re already causing a stir.
This bold new pictogram, featuring a red light, a camera, and vehicles in its crosshairs, warns of cameras positioned 25 metres before traffic lights, snapping two shots: one as the driver approaches and another if they cross on red.
The system is already live in cities like Madrid, with 35 units, and Barcelona, boasting 42, according to recent reports.
This new sign features a red light, a camera, and vehicles in its crosshairs. DGT
Get caught, and you’re looking at a hefty €200 fine plus a hit of 4 points on your driving licence.
The technology, designed to clamp down on dangerous driving, uses high-definition cameras to ensure your number plate is crystal clear in both images.
Since these systems rolled out, the DGT says red-light violations have jumped 15% – proof they’re working, though not everyone’s convinced.
Social media is buzzing with complaints, with some drivers claiming the late addition of warning signs feels unfair, while others worry about ambulances getting stuck behind cautious motorists terrified of a ticket.
There’s also a whiff of controversy over the cost, with cynics on social media suggesting the ‘sparkling new’ signs might be lining someone’s pockets rather than just the roads.
Yet the DGT insists it’s about safety, targeting a real problem on Spain’s busy urban streets.
For expats and holidaymakers, it is a wake-up call.
Studies suggest nearly seven in ten European drivers didn’t even know retroactive signage like this could exist.
If you’re behind the wheel, keep an eye out for the S-991c sign – especially in cities – and keep in mind that the DGT (Spain’s traffic authority) is watching.
Click here to read more Spain News from The Olive Press.
Set-up in 2003, thinkSPAIN is the world’s most visited international homebuyer focused Spanish property portal based in Spain. Over 2,000 agents and owners advertise 250,000+ properties on thinkSPAIN. www.thinkspain.com
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AS the record-breaking heatwave took hold spreading its tendrils from the Sahara into Europe, the Olive Press went heat chasing.
Just as storm-chasers like to get up close and personal with tornadoes and hurricanes, we went to death-defying meteorological phenomena and came up with a new one: the heat chaser.
Weather forecasters had already bandied about the possibility of Spain seeing 46C while still in the month of June, and we wanted to be there to feel it hit us in the face.
So we set out for Ecija, a charming Sevillian town of baroque spires affectionately known as the frying pan of Spain.
Ecija is a city of baroque architecture in the province of Sevilla. Walter Finch
Located in the Guadalquivir Valley in a geographical depression that traps the oppressive inland heat, Ecija has registered temperatures of over 46C in the peak summer months before (ie. not June).
In fact, it is just down the road from where Spain’s all-time record heat of 47.6C, recorded in Cordoba in August 2021.
“It’s criminal the heat that we have to endure here, but we manage,” Marga, Ecija resident born-and-bred, told the Olive Press.
Ecija local Marga said that the extreme temperatures were nothing unusual for the town
During the peak summer months, as the sun inches its way higher into the sky, the Ecija residents scurry to the shadows.
The day starts full of life and activity. Tables and chairs go out on the broad central square, Plaza España, around 8am – when the temperature is only 30C.
The abuelos and the workers occupy the tables and queue up at the bar windows to collect their cafe con leches con hielo – ice coffee.
Ecija lives by night during the summer – no one goes out before 9pm. Walter Finch
The shops are open and people go about their business. But there are no tourists.
Despite the abundant beauty of the baroque towers, the elegant palaces and the Roman mosaics, this is the off-season. It seems that heatwave tourism is not a thing in Sevilla province – not yet.
Even by 10.30am, people are sticking to the shade, creeping along the walls like the shadows they are sheltering in. It hit around 36C at this hour.
By midday, it’s a ghost town. It’s like a scene from one of those old westerns, in which everyone knows there’s a gunfight imminent and disappears behind their curtains – except for the Olive Press.
It’s not that we’re brave. We were just oblivious.
Waitress Tamara, 24, said she was lucky no one sits outside on the terrace during the day
In the tightening grip of the heatwave, is this something new? The choral response from everyone we spoke with in the town was ‘no – it’s the same heat as always.’
Business as usual. But the heat has come earlier this summer, they concede.
In the afternoon, news comes through that Spain has broken its heat record for June – 200km to the west.
Known as the frying pan of Spain, Ecija sits in a depression that traps the summer heat
While they got 46C in El Granado, we didn’t get above 43C in Ecija.
It was still hot in the frying pan of Spain. But was it hot enough to fry an egg, as the old cliche went?
By 4pm the bars have all closed and the central plaza has been roasting in uninterrupted sun for over six hours.
Even to sit on one of the stone benches was enough to fry one’s behind. We procured an egg and cracked it onto the burning surface.
Forecasters are fearing that Spain will get a 50C day one summer soon
Did the egg white start sizzling? Did it whiten at the edges? Did the yoke harden? Long story short it did not. Instead we just had raw egg mess on a bench.
So it wasn’t record-breaking heat in the frying pan, but dealing with it was still a way of life. The town didn’t start to come back to life till after 9pm.
“Here, we live by night,” Jon and Mihail, a pair of Romanians gearing up for Saturday night, told the Olive Press.
“Yes, it was hard to get used to at first, but it’s only two months a year.”
Given the premature nature of this heatwave, they might have to extend their endurance in the coming years.
Ranked on several factors, including the average costs for a winery tour, a bottle of wine, and a three-star hotel stay, Rioja took the top placing.
Located below the Cantabrian Mountains, Rioja has a renowned local wine industry, with more than 65,000 hectares of vineyards growing across the Ebro Valley and surrounding the old town of Haro.
It’s Spain’s largest wine region with more than 600 wineries.
Enjoy summer festivals all about wine like the Batalla de Vino, and visit local bodegas where you’ll find small, traditional wine cellars, as well as major commercial wine producers.
There’s great summer weather with warm temperatures and a low chance of rain.
The prices are relatively low compared to other famous European wine regions, too, with an average winery tour priced at £19 and a bottle of wine costing an average of around £22.
Italy’s Piedmont and Tuscany regions take the second and third placings for the best European wine regions of 2025.