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Nature & Environment

Snow in Almeria: Calar Alto Turns White as Rain Reaches Much of the Province

Published December 1, 2025 | Category: Nature & Environment

TL;DR: Snow returned to the province on Sunday afternoon, covering Calar Alto in white and bringing steady rainfall to more than a dozen towns as cold winter air settled in.

Snow in Almeria Returns to Calar Alto as Widespread Rain Reaches Much of Almeria

Snow in Almeria made an early return this weekend as the highest peaks of the Sierra de los Filabres turned white once again. The Calar Alto area, home to one of Spain’s main high-altitude observatories, saw fresh snowfall on Sunday afternoon, marking one of the first notable winter episodes of the season.

At 2,168 metres above sea level, temperatures in Calar Alto dropped below zero, allowing snow to accumulate around the upper slopes and surrounding pine forests. The cold air mass has also brought a sharp temperature drop across inland municipalities, with places like Chirivel, Maria, Velez-Rubio and Velez-Blanco expected to fall close to 3ºC overnight.

Rainfall Across the Province

Alongside the snowfall, steady rain moved across a wide area of the province on Sunday. According to data from regional meteorological networks, Ohanes recorded the highest recent accumulation with nearly 6 litres per square metre in one hour. Felix also registered significant rainfall, followed closely by Canjayar and Abrucena.

In the western and central regions, towns such as Dalias, Enix, El Ejido and Roquetas de Mar measured between 3 and 4 litres per square metre during the afternoon. Lighter but continuous rainfall was also reported in Finana, Fondon, Illar, Vicar, La Mojonera, Alcolea and Berja.

Winter Conditions Settling In

With temperatures continuing to drop and rain spreading across much of the province, the transition into December is now clearly underway. More unsettled weather is expected in the coming days as the cold air mass remains over the region.


For more environmental updates from across the province, visit our Nature & Environment section.

Nature & Environment

Junta Rejects New Camping Project in Cabo de Gata

Published November 28, 2025 | Category: Nature & Environment

TL;DR: The regional government has rejected a proposed camping with 42 bungalows in the Cabo de Gata-Nijar Natural Park because it was too close to an existing motorhome area.

Junta Blocks New Camping Project Near Cabo de Gata

A plan to build a camping complex with 42 bungalows in the La Joya area of Agua Amarga, inside the Cabo de Gata-Nijar Natural Park, has been rejected by the regional government. The project, which included reception facilities, a restaurant, bar, small supermarket and leisure areas, has been denied unified environmental authorisation.

According to the Junta de Andalucía, the project is incompatible with the current planning rules for the natural park. One of the key points is distance: any new tourist camping site in this zone must be located at least six kilometres away from another existing campsite.

In this case, there is already an authorised motorhome area in Agua Amarga, just one kilometre from the proposed site. Under the current tourism regulations, this motorhome area is officially classified as a tourist camping, which means the new project would not meet the required separation distance.

The decision effectively halts the development and sends a clear signal that new tourist accommodation inside protected areas will be strictly evaluated against existing facilities and environmental rules.


For more stories about protected areas and environmental policy, visit our Nature & Environment section.

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Infrastructure

Palomares PA-4 urbanisation project: environmental risks, nuclear legacy and coastal regression

Published November 16, 2025 | Category: Infrastructure

TL;DR: The Palomares PA-4 urbanisation project — a plan for 1,600 homes and a hotel on a fragile coastal area — has received regional approval despite flood risks, ecosystem vulnerability, water pressure and proximity to Palomares’ radiological monitoring zone. Environmental groups warn that the project ignores long-term climate projections and coastal regression.

Palomares PA-4 urbanisation project: a new mega-development

Overview

The PA-4 urbanisation sector in Palomares proposes the construction of 1,600 homes and a hotel next to Quitapellejos beach, in one of the most environmentally delicate zones of Cuevas del Almanzora. The regional environmental ruling, issued by the Junta de Andalucía, concludes that the project is “compatible” as long as extensive conditions are met.

Environmental groups argue the opposite, warning that the project could damage fragile coastal habitats, increase flood risks and add population pressure to an area already experiencing water constraints and coastal regression.

Nuclear context surrounding the Palomares PA-4 urbanisation project

The 1966 accident involving US thermonuclear bombs dispersed plutonium dust over several hectares of Palomares. Although partially cleaned, the area still maintains monitored land under the supervision of CIEMAT.

The PA-4 area sits just outside the radiological perimeter, but environmental groups highlight that the contaminated soil has never been fully removed, and future decontamination could be complicated by large-scale residential occupation.

A fragile ecosystem: coastal sand formations, vegetation and biodiversity

The project area contains low coastal sand formations, halophytic vegetation and habitat zones identified as environmentally sensitive. The Spanish ruling explicitly acknowledges the presence of dunas and habitats of community interest, even if these formations are not visually large dunes.

Ecologists warn that proposed “restoration” and “transplanting” measures are unreliable, as coastal sand systems depend on wind dynamics, sediment supply and storm patterns that cannot be artificially replicated.

Water pressure and desalination dependency in Levante Almeriense

Over the past decade, water supply for Levante Almeriense has required emergency interventions. The region depends heavily on the Galasa network and the Carboneras desalination plant. The Junta accepts existing certificates but environmental groups argue that adding an estimated 4,000 new residents increases long-term vulnerability given past shortages and infrastructure failures.

Flood zones, sea-level rise and coastal regression

The Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica (MITECO) identifies the Quitapellejos sector as an area experiencing:

  • coastal regression,
  • stronger seasonal storms,
  • low land elevation,
  • increasing exposure due to climate change.

The original planning documents proposed channelling rainwater through streets towards the shoreline—an approach ecologists consider unacceptable under modern coastal-risk standards.

Urban planning timeline: an old licence in a new climate reality

The PA-4 sector holds longstanding urbanisation rights dating back decades. This older licence underpins the current project, despite being drafted in a period without today’s climate science, sea-level projections or updated coastal protection laws.

Environmental organisations argue that inactivity over such a long time should invalidate the licence; however, the Junta has not questioned its validity.

The municipal position and the political dimension

The Ayuntamiento de Cuevas del Almanzora supports the project, citing a lack of hotel beds, economic benefits and competition with neighbouring coastal towns. The position has remained consistent across political parties.

Environmental groups counter that PA-4 is the wrong location for high-density development due to flood risks, ecosystem fragility and the still-unresolved radiological legacy.

Comparisons with Mojácar, Vera Playa and Terreros

Supporters compare the project to existing developed areas such as Mojácar and Vera Playa. Ecologists argue that these comparisons ignore fundamental differences:

  • Mojácar has a longer and more stable coastline.
  • Vera Playa was urbanised before modern regulations.
  • Terreros shows the risk of speculative projects that leave unfinished streets and infrastructure.

Tourism, hotel capacity and economic expectations

Cuevas del Almanzora lacks hotel accommodation, and supporters argue a new hotel could stimulate tourism. However, ecologists warn that:

  • Water demand will increase.
  • Sewage systems depending on pumping stations are vulnerable to storms.
  • Flood-exposed coastal real estate may be risky long-term.

Conclusion

The approval of the Palomares PA-4 urbanisation project highlights the ongoing tension between economic development and environmental protection along Almeria’s fragile coastline. While technically allowed under strict conditions, the combined risks — coastal regression, flood exposure, ecosystem fragility and proximity to monitored nuclear-contaminated land — raise questions about its long-term sustainability.

For more updates from across the province, visit our Nature & Environment category.

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Almeria News

Las Negras Cleanup This Sunday: Volunteers Join Níjar Town Hall in Cabo de Gata

Published November 2025 | Category: Nature & Environment

TL;DR: This Sunday, Las Negras hosts a community cleanup with international volunteers, supported by the Níjar Town Hall and funded through the EU’s European Solidarity Corps.

Las Negras cleanup this Sunday: volunteers unite to protect Cabo de Gata–Níjar Natural Park

The village of Las Negras will host a community cleanup this Sunday, 16 November, bringing together the Níjar Town Hall and an international team of volunteers. The event aims to protect one of the most environmentally sensitive areas of the Cabo de Gata–Níjar Natural Park while raising awareness among residents and visitors.

Overview

The activity is part of a month-long programme funded by the European Solidarity Corps (ESC), which brings young volunteers from across Europe to collaborate on environmental initiatives in the Níjar municipality. The volunteers are currently based in Fernán Pérez and are participating in coastal cleanups, neighbourhood maintenance and environmental workshops in local schools.

Event details

Date: Sunday, 16 November 2025
Start time: 09:00
Meeting point: Las Negras roundabout

The cleanup will focus on the village entrance, the beach area and the dry riverbed. All tools and materials — including gloves and bags — will be provided by the organisers. Residents and visitors interested in joining can contact the coordination team at +39 320 063 8535.

Environmental context

The initiative comes after a summer in which the Níjar Town Hall removed more than seven tons of waste from popular beaches such as Agua Amarga and San José. During the high season, the Natural Park faces intense visitor pressure: nearly 50,000 vehicles passed through the controlled access points to Mónsul, Barronal and Genoveses between June and September.

Local authorities highlight that community-led activities like this one help mitigate seasonal impact while strengthening environmental stewardship throughout the year.

For more updates from across the province, visit our Community category.

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Almeria News

Almeria Earthquake: 4.2-Magnitude Tremor and Aftershocks

Published October 30, 2025 | Category: News

TL;DR: A 4.2-magnitude quake rattled western Almeria overnight but caused no damage — experts say it’s part of the region’s normal seismic rhythm.


Table of Contents

4.2-Magnitude Earthquake Shakes Almeria

At 10:38 p.m. on October 29, 2025, residents across western Almeria felt a sudden jolt as a 4.2-magnitude earthquake struck off the coast. The epicentre was located in the North Alboran Sea, just south of El Ejido and near Balerma, at a shallow depth of about two kilometres.

The National Geographic Institute (IGN) recorded the tremor with an intensity between III and IV on the European Macroseismic Scale. The shaking was noticeable indoors but caused no structural damage. Authorities quickly confirmed there were no injuries or disruptions across the province.

Overnight Aftershocks Across the Coast

Throughout the night, the earth continued to move beneath Almeria’s coastline. Five smaller aftershocks were recorded between 11:08 p.m. and 6:12 a.m. Thursday morning, ranging from magnitudes 1.6 to 2.5. All originated near Balanegra and El Ejido, consistent with a normal pattern of stress release after a moderate quake.

This activity follows the stronger July 14, 2025 earthquake (magnitude 5.4) near Níjar — part of a recurring seismic cycle in southern Spain that experts say is normal for the area.

What Causes Earthquakes in Almeria

Almeria sits on one of Europe’s most dynamic geological borders — the boundary between the African and Eurasian plates. As the African Plate pushes slowly northward, it compresses and fractures the crust beneath the Alboran Sea. The Carboneras Fault, which runs offshore between Níjar and Vera, is one of the most active fault lines in the region.

Scientists from the CSIC and IGN note that most earthquakes here are minor, though they serve as a reminder that Almeria is built on a living, shifting landscape. “It’s a naturally active zone,” explains one IGN technician. “The ground occasionally trembles — that’s how the Earth releases tension.”

A Seismic History That Runs Deep

Earthquakes are nothing new to Almeria. The city was nearly destroyed in 1522 by one of the most powerful earthquakes in Spanish history, which led to the reconstruction of its fortified cathedral. Another devastating event struck in 1804 around Dalías and Berja, killing hundreds and reshaping the region’s architecture.

Even towns like Vera and Huércal-Overa have felt their share of tremors through the centuries. Modern construction standards, however, now make significant damage from moderate quakes extremely unlikely.

How Strong Was It? Understanding Intensity Levels

The IGN uses the European Macroseismic Scale (EMS-98) to describe how earthquakes are felt by people rather than instruments:

  • Intensity IV – Felt indoors by many people; objects move slightly; minimal vibration.
  • Intensity III – Felt by a few indoors; hanging objects swing lightly.
  • Intensity II – Barely perceptible, usually noticed only at rest.

Wednesday night’s Almeria earthquake registered between levels II and IV depending on location — enough to surprise residents, but not strong enough to cause harm.

Staying Safe: Preparedness and Advice

Experts recommend staying calm during tremors and following three key steps:

  • Drop to your hands and knees to prevent falling.
  • Cover your head and neck under sturdy furniture or next to an interior wall.
  • Hold On until the shaking stops.

After the quake, check for hazards and avoid elevators.
Residents can follow updates and report experiences directly to the National Geographic Institute (IGN), which monitors seismic activity in real time.

Natural forces

The October 29, 2025 Almeria earthquake was another reminder of the natural forces shaping southern Spain. While the ground may tremble now and then, Almeria’s spirit — like its landscape — remains strong and unshaken.

For more local updates, explore our News and Nature & Environment sections.


For more updates from across the province, visit our Nature & Environment category.

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