The lifeguards are desalination

The tourist paradise of the Balearic Islands faces its most uncomfortable mirror: The dry tap. While the archipelago faces a summer that points to record figures of visitors (As occurs throughout the summer), their water resources collapse to historical minimums. The situation is so critical that the municipality of Sóller barely has guaranteed water for 10 days, and Ibiza registers its worst reserves in a decade. Sóller as an epicenter of the problem. The strongest alarm sounds in the Sierra de Tramutantana, in Mallorca. In Sóllera municipality of 13,000 inhabitants, the City Council has been forced to Decree emergency measures On August 29. Among these, it has been forbidden to fill pools with drinking water, water gardens or orchards, wash the car or clean the facade. Even the municipal cleaning service itself has the use of water to bucket the streets. The situation, qualified by the mayor as “nothing encouraging”, has caused the anger of the neighbors. From the SOS Soller local platform, its spokesman, Bartu Miró, denounces a “complete neglect to leave the tourist do what he wants throughout the summer” As you collect The confidential. In his statements, he looked at that the Consistory has waited until the last day of August to act, when the shortage was a predictable and monitoring problem. “Now we are in emergency,” he says. A ghost of the past. The fear that the neighbors have is not unfounded. Residents already remember episodes in the past in which the desperate water extraction of the wells caused the salinization of aquifers. Specifically, in 2001 ten of the 21 aquifers in Mallorca They were salinized, and some of them with levels much higher than the maximum potability limit. Something that can leave the water source unusable for many years. In this way, we are facing a technical and management error that no one wants In August he had to apply supply cuts In different areas, including the hotels themselves. An archipelago in Prealerta. What happens in La Tramuntana is not an isolated case, it is the symptom of a disease that is affecting the entire archipelago. According to the data provided by the seafire and water cyclethe situation of resources to July 2025 begins to be worrying. Practically, all demand units are found in A prealert scenario for drought. Only Formentera and the southern zone of La Tramuntana are saved, which paradogically is where the municipalities with greater restrictions are located, such as Sóller. This alert level means, according to the regional administration itself, that “resources begin to diminish and it is necessary to start taking some management measures.” Ibiza data are worrisome. The island suffers Your worst reservations of recent yearsbeing the same that was reported in June 2016 for the last time, touched by the state of drought alert. In the case of Menorca, the reserves are found right now in 40%, which marks its second worst historical record. Formentera, despite having a less severe pre -alert state, also has a fragile situation. It has less than 400 liters of rain a year, and this causes the island to depend almost exclusively on the water produced by the Desalination which is an important energy cost. How much water does tourism consume? While requested residents who do not wash the car or put the washing machine when it is full, environmental groups point to the tourist model of the islands as guilty. A report by the University of Les Illes Balears (UIB) already pointed to 25% of the total water consumption It was due to visitors to be received in the archipelago. Pere Joan, spokesman for the Menys Turisme platform, Més Vida, criticizes that “the restrictions are usually applied in the least tourist areas and farthest from the sea”, suggesting a management that prioritizes the consumption of the visitor over the needs of the resident. A technological solution. Before the collapse of natural resources, the Balearic Government has put a Action plan endowed with 288 million euros to improve the supply, mainly through the expansion and improvement of desalination plants and sanitation and purification networks. In addition, 4.4 million euros have been allocated to promote refined water reuse, a key measure to reduce pressure on aquifers. The problem of desalination plants. Although these teams that convert sea water into drinking water through reverse osmosis are vital for the supply of many coastal areas, they have their inconveniences. Among them is the great energy impact, since the desalination process requires a large amount of energy, which in a context of energy transition involves an economic and environmental challenge. But don’t stay here. The brine, the hypersaline residue that is returned to the sea, can damage marine ecosystems, especially the Postidonia grasslands, vital for Mediterranean health. In Xataka | If Spain believes to have a problem with droughts it is because it does not know those that led the Maya to collapse: 150 years extreme

The rent has risen so much in Galicia that its beaches have problems hiring something fundamental: lifeguards

The tourism industry has faced for a long time A worrying dilemma In Spain (as in other countries): as its main destinations grow and gain attractive, The price goes up of the accommodation, which makes things more and more difficult for workers who support the sector. We have seen it In Tenerifewhere there are hoteliers who are forced to Sleep in caravans For the high cost of rentals. And we see it now In Galiciawhere housing is affecting an even more sensitive group: lifeguards. Although in the official registry of the community there are registered Thousands of lifeguards Prepared to monitor the beaches, some locations are costing to sign them. And one of the reasons is the high price of rentals on the coast. Costs. The news He has revealed it The Galician mail: Although the official registration of the Xunta has more than 4,500 inscribed lifeguards, a record that exceeds 13% to those accounted for in 2024, there are areas of Galicia in which it is not easy to “sign” professionals. It is not a general something. In fact there are municipalities that have covered their vacancies well. But there are certain points in the region in which not even this abundance assures them to find vigilantes. And what is the reason? There are several factors at stake. Input, how the population is distributed. Not all municipalities have the same bag of inhabitants and, therefore, of neighbors with the lifeguard title willing to cover sand sands that remain close to their homes. Another key is working conditions. The salaries are around 1,200 euros per month, according to Precise The Galician mailand they are hired for very short periods, from two to three months. These circumstances lead to professionals who choose to move to other more southern or warm destinations, such as the Canary Islands or Andalusia, in which they can opt for six -month jobs or for full years. To solve it there are those who even has raised The possibility of betting on “a permanent body” of lifeguards who cover the heat months, more extensive. Another handicap that affects the sector is the bureaucracy: the longer the aid takes, the greater the risk that the lifeguards have sought alternatives. Housing slopes. The above are, together with the regulatory issues of the sector, the factors that have marked the guild in Galicia in recent years and explain that the region has suffered shortage of lifeguards. Now one more factor comes into play. The mail assures that this summer the consistors are proving easier to sign vigilants, but where the reason has been found with difficulties is another: the housing price, In full climb. The general price increase in Galicia as a whole, 7.1% in the last year According to idealistadded to the high seasonal demand of coastal destinations during the summer months, Galician lifeguards who have to leave their locality and rent a floor. In practice that hinders hiring in localities that have to ‘import’ lifeguards out. Is the house so expensive? A few days ago Technitas published A report in which he points out that an 85 m2 apartment on Riazor beach (A Coruña) reaches € 1,400 per week, one hundred more than last year. In Vicedo (Lugo) a 65 m2 floor costs 650 euros, one hundred more than a year ago, and in O Grove (Pontevedra) a 75 m2 house requires a disbursement of 950 euros per week. The report speaks of vacation leases, but that scenario fully affects seasonal professionals who, like lifeguards, seek accommodation for a few months. Beyond Galicia. It is not a problem that affects only Galicia. Recently Antena3 He spoke With José Luis, a lifeguard who has been in Ibiza for 25 years and who has not left any choice but to buy a caravan to have a place to live. Renting an apartment is discarded, he explains, because it costs more than he earns with his watchman work. Even the caravan option begins to complicate. “Being in a campsite costs me about 1,800 euros per month.” “This is something that happens throughout Spain and the most affected places are the ones with the greatest tourist influx, such as Balearic Islands, Valencian Community and some areas of Andalusia and Catalonia,” Confirm to The mail José Palacios, coordinator of the Research Group in Aquatic Activities and Saporrism and President of DEAC, the entity responsible for granting the blue flags to the sand. Healing in health. To make sure they will have lifeguards there are consistories that directly choose to form them. This is the case of Ribeira, in the Barbanza region, which in 2024 and 2025 He has conducted courses Own who have allowed him to prepare the young people who will be in charge of controlling the sands of the region. Another strategy to prevent them from opting for less seasonal destinations is to expand their work period: instead of hiring them in July, they are incorporated into their positions in June, when many beaches of Galicia begin to fill. Images | Pedro Dias (Flickr) and Carmelo Peciña (Flickr) In Xataka | “Fodechinchos Free”: in a bar in Galicia Tourism Fobia is being redirected against the Spaniards of other regions

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