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Spain’s Malaga cancels plans to build 1,300 tourist homes and ponders ‘total ban’ of land sale to foreigners

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MALAGA is turning away from property sales to non-Spaniards.

The city council is cancelling plans to build 1,300 tourist homes and is contemplating a ‘total ban’ on the sale of land to anyone who is not a native Spaniard.

The mayor of Malaga, Francisco de la Torre, has announced that a new measure is being considered within the framework of the General Urban Planning Document (PGOU). By law, every municipal council in Spain must publish a PGOU – a town planning scheme that allocates land for housing, industrial units, and other uses.

Malaga City Council continues to introduce tougher measures to curb the construction and acquisition of tourist housing. Following several interventions last year, including modifications to the PGOU, De la Torre said, somewhat surprisingly, that “a global moratorium” is under consideration.

The proposal, which must be approved at a future Local Government Board meeting—no date has yet been set—represents a further step in the measures already adopted. These include prohibiting the authorisation of new holiday apartments in 43 neighbourhoods of the Costa del Sol’s capital.

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De la Torre indicated that the municipal strategy implemented so far has led to a significant reduction in the number of registered holiday homes. “We are a municipality clearly committed to this; we are also trying to understand the exact statistics,” he explained. Malaga now has the authority to prohibit the opening of new holiday apartments in many neighbourhoods, such as Centro, La Merced, and Malagueta.

He also referred to the hiring of a specialist company to provide accurate data on the sector and the number of properties currently in operation. One objective is “to identify the number of illegal holiday homes.” He described the study as “a kind of compass to guide us on this issue,” while also praising the reduction achieved so far.

Regarding the proposed moratorium, De la Torre explained that the General Urban Development Plan (PGOU) is under review. “We want to know how many tourist homes there are, where they are located, how many new tourist apartments have been opened, what land has been taken up by tourist rentals and hotels, and where these developments are concentrated. We want to determine how tourism can be made compatible with everyday city life. We need to decide whether guidelines should be established to ensure a balance,” he added.

The tide may be turning against foreign buyers looking to purchase property on the Costa del Sol. British buyers are particularly vulnerable post-Brexit, as Dutch, German, and French citizens retain rights as EU nationals, whereas Britons do not.

Some may recall the ‘bulldozing’ controversy in Marbella about 15 years ago. Unscrupulous developers bribed councillors to draft a PGOU permitting the construction of new properties in barrancos, or flood channels. When the Madrid government became aware of this, it ordered the demolition of the ‘irregular’ properties. Overseas buyers were severely disadvantaged, as no one had explained to them that, in Spain, owning a house and owning the land it stands on are two separate legal concepts. The Spanish government argued that homes built in barrancos do not acquire any legal rights, as flood zones are specifically designated as unsuitable for dwellings.

Concerns are now growing over the mayor of Malaga’s focus on ‘legality.’ There is apprehension that Malaga City Hall or the Madrid government could begin altering the PGOU and reclassifying some areas of land. Observers suggest that recent protests against guiris (foreigners) have made local politicians cautious. For 60 years, foreigners have been welcomed to the Costa del Sol due to their economic contributions. However, in recent months, protests have emerged claiming that the influx of foreign buyers has driven up property prices, making housing less accessible for native Spaniards.

Government figures indicate that 350,000 non-Spaniards reside on the Andalusian coast, with seven out of every 10 newcomers being foreigners.

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Only 20% of Spain’s power restored as the government declares nationwide state of emergency

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SPAIN has declared a state of emergency after a massive power cut left the country in the dark for more than eight hours.

Many areas of the country are still without power, mobile coverage and running water, with only 20% of Spain’s power capacity restored, national operator Red Eléctrica said on social media platform X.

By 9pm, power is only just coming back to parts of Madrid. Yet, the trains and metro in the capital are still not open to the public. The Madrid Open tennis match was also suspended earlier in the day.

Some people have reported that their power is back, but their internet signals remain intermittent. The seaside town of Estepona has power back but just an hour by car to Málaga and the city remains dark.

Meanwhile, electricity has been restored for 750,000 customers in Portugal said national provider REN.

While the cause of the blackout is still unknown, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez held a press conference this evening and told the public not to speculate.

He said a ‘strong technical fluctuation in the European electricity system led to the blackout,’ but there is ‘no conclusive information’ on the cause yet.

Portugese Prime Minister Luís Montenegro said there was ‘no indication’ the power cut had been caused by a cyber attack.

Various regions across Spain, including Madrid, Galicia, Aragon and Castilla-La Mancha have suspended teaching activities on Tuesday, but students are still able to attend school grounds.

The day’s unprecedented events indicate how vulnerable national electricity systems can be, with massive blackouts affecting countries around the world in recent years.

A failure in German’s grid left 10 million people without power for an hour in Spain, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy in November 2006.

University of Strathclyde professor Keith Bell said it was unlikely today’s power outage was caused by a single fault.

Power operators can usually copy with any single outage in a system called N-1 secure.

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Only 20% Of Spain’s Power Restored As The Government Declares Nationwide State Of Emergency – Olive Press News Spain

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only-20%-of-spain’s-power-restored-as-the-government-declares-nationwide-state-of-emergency-–-olive-press-news-spain

SPAIN has declared a state of emergency after a massive power cut left the country in the dark for more than eight hours.

Many areas of the country are still without power, mobile coverage and running water, with only 20% of Spain’s power capacity restored, national operator Red Eléctrica said on social media platform X.

By 9pm, power is only just coming back to parts of Madrid. Yet, the trains and metro in the capital are still not open to the public. The Madrid Open tennis match was also suspended earlier in the day.

Some people have reported that their power is back, but their internet signals remain intermittent. The seaside town of Estepona has power back but just an hour by car to Málaga and the city remains dark.

Meanwhile, electricity has been restored for 750,000 customers in Portugal said national provider REN.

While the cause of the blackout is still unknown, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez held a press conference this evening and told the public not to speculate.

He said a ‘strong technical fluctuation in the European electricity system led to the blackout,’ but there is ‘no conclusive information’ on the cause yet.

Portugese Prime Minister Luís Montenegro said there was ‘no indication’ the power cut had been caused by a cyber attack.

Various regions across Spain, including Madrid, Galicia, Aragon and Castilla-La Mancha have suspended teaching activities on Tuesday, but students are still able to attend school grounds.

The day’s unprecedented events indicate how vulnerable national electricity systems can be, with massive blackouts affecting countries around the world in recent years.

A failure in German’s grid left 10 million people without power for an hour in Spain, France, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands and Italy in November 2006.

University of Strathclyde professor Keith Bell said it was unlikely today’s power outage was caused by a single fault.

Power operators can usually copy with any single outage in a system called N-1 secure.

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blackout

ZERO DAY: How an Olive Press reporter watched Spain’s world turn upside down on historic day

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EXTRAORDINARY TIMES: How Zero Day unravelled on the Costa del Sol as cash is king and the supermarkets all shut their doors.

By Jon Clarke in San Pedro Alcantara

It was around 12.30pm. The first sign of something strange was the giant wind turbines on the road between Gaucin and Manilva on the Costa del Sol standing totally still.

It came despite the strong Poniente wind blowing a hoolie and buffeting the car. But they just didn’t move. 

And then there was the most bizarre gust of wind, and the car literally rocked. The Rest is Politics podcast on Spotify cut off and when I tried to call my wife on WhatsApp it just wouldn’t connect.

Next I noticed the phone had changed to ‘SOS’ only with a strange symbol next to it.

I couldn’t have guessed at this point it was becoming like Robert De Niro’s gripping new Netflix White House drama Zero Day where terrorists paralyzed the power grid in the US leading to widespread chaos, including multiple plane crashes.

A sign reads ‘station out of service: general power cut’

By the time I got onto the main N-340 motorway at Manilva, cars were driving slowly in parallel lines and all the tunnels had dropped the speed limit to 60… then my wife called to ask if I’d heard about the Spain-wide power cut, ‘what was going on?’ 

She had neither electricity nor water in Marbella. Could I find out? When was I coming home? She sounded worried. Then she cut off.

Next, I had a call from Valencia from our sales rep there telling me all the power was out in the city, and finally I spoke to our digital editor, Walt, who is based in La Linea.

He told me he had no power either but had somehow got a post up and was trying to get reports up on social media ‘when the reception comes back from time to time’.

He said Gibraltar was fine and he might head across to do more reporting. But, understandably, he didn’t know if the border would be open. It was.

Access shut off to shops and supermarkets

Meanwhile, our news editor, Dilip, had sensibly left the office to drive home and finally phoned to say he’d got there and would try and work with his mobile phone hot spot.

I was enroute to an event, Chefs for Children, with 150 kids and 44 of Spain’s top chefs in Benahavis. A special event, it seemed vital to support it, and I decided to head that way regardless, only to find the mother of all traffic jams as I passed Estepona.

Eventually, I got off the motorway and arrived via a back route I knew (forget using Google Maps, it was dead as a dodo).

The first thing I noticed was the kitchen full of food for the evening’s glitzy gala – all in the dark, piles of food loaded up. 

The reception of the five star Anantana Padierna spa hotel had light, but as a receptionist told me, nobody could check out and pay as credit cards were not working, and the downstairs car park barriers were not working so if you had a car you ‘can’t get out’.

Staff were nowhere to be seen in many cases

The event went well, as it happened, but the mayor of Benahavis and one of Malaga’s leading politicians, Manuel Cardena, told me they were ‘very concerned’ and, quite rightly, baffled.

The deputy mayor, British expat Scott Marshall, told me they ‘were not ruling anything out’, but they were all talking about the Russians or Chinese being to blame.

Suddenly as if on orders from above, they all left together for who knows where.

The evening’s presenter, Fermando Ramos, a well known Spanish TV presenter, told me he was ‘very worried’ and said it was putting the whole evening in danger. 

Organiser, Pilar Candil, said at least all the chefs – including a number of Spain’s most famous three-star celebrities – were there in situ… ‘they have the food to prepare IF we get power and at least there is lots of good wine, care of Emilio Moro’.

The stern faces of local workers says all…

There was plenty of tension in the air though, and all the parents were trying to use their phones… and predictably the only conversation was about terrorism and the Russians.

As a journalist, they were all asking me what I knew (which was little) and as soon as the day’s event ended I hot footed it to San Pedro, where the Olive Press office is based, to see what was going on.

And, of course, there was nobody there – the Marie Celeste of local newspapers, everyone out, gone. Many at least to do some reporting.

But it was pitch black, so hanging around there made no sense.

I got home and discovered my teenage son at home. “Everyone just left school,” he told me. “Loads of parents turned up and it was a sort of stampede. All the kids went home.”

Speaking to a Dia worker, who was just as confused as the next person

All the national radio stations were out, including Radio Classica, Radio 5, Radio 3. All we could listen to was the few people in the studio in Madrid on Radio 1 who occasionally got a call in from a reporter, perhaps on a satellite phone.

Incredibly, RAÍ Andalucia was also working.

Nobody really knew what was going on but they started to talk to people stuck in trains, and then the discussion turned to people ‘stuck in lifts’.

I decided to go out to investigate and found firstly the local health centre closing at 2pm as there was no power. “We have no generator,” a nurse told me. “If it’s an emergency we can take you into A&E but it will all be dealt with manually.

“Anything really urgent you’ll need to go to La Linea or Costa del Sol hospital.”

A service station in San Pedro forced to shut down

Nearby, the pharmacy was shutting. The owner, Victor Navarro, was trying to close the shutters but couldn’t do it without power. “We’ve been trying to give people urgent medicines in cash but it’s hard to monitor it without a register,” he told me.

Around the corner, the Dia supermarket was closed and a dozen staff sat around outside on a wall not knowing what to do … “nobody’s told us anything, but the tills and everything is out,” said one.

It was the same situation at nearby Carrefour. But at least a helpful member of staff pointed us towards Mercadona. “The one up by the roundabout is open but there are apparently very big queues.”

Not when we got there however, with angry customers, who had apparently queued to get in for ages, suddenly saw the lights go out as the generator’s fuel ran out. They had been left, literally in the dark with no chance of checking out.

There were long rows of full trolleys just left by check out.

Across the road we found what was probably the only shop working – the BP petrol station. But it was ‘cash-only’ and there was a queue of over 100 cars jostling to get in. 

So many punters had headed here that the local police had four agents guiding traffic at nearby strategic points to avoid a total collapse.

I had 10 euros in my pocket so bought some Gazpacho, Doritos, chocolate and ice to keep the milk cool in the fridge back home.

“It’s the busiest we’ve ever been,” said the manager. “Extraordinary. I didn’t know so many people still had so much cash.”

As I got home at 5pm I was told the Prime Minister, Pedro Sanchez, was about to speak as rumours swirled on the radio about some strange ‘adverse atmospheric phenomenon’ and so I waited for an entire hour in the car to hear him.

He finally told us pretty much diddly squat: “We are discounting nothing. We are just trying to get the power back on.”

It was time to go to the beach!

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