Sustainability
Solar Energy Expansion to Usher in Agrivoltaics in Uleila del Campo
Agrivoltaics in Almería: Uleila del Campo Launches Pioneering Green Energy Project
Uleila del Campo – April 2025
A new solar energy project is underway near Uleila del Campo, marking a major milestone in the application of agrivoltaics—a technology that combines solar panel installations with agricultural activity. This dual-use approach aligns with Spain’s clean energy goals and Almería’s efforts to modernize sustainably.
Growth of Solar Power and Agrivoltaic Integration
The upcoming installation will span several hectares of farmland just outside Uleila del Campo. Unlike traditional solar farms, this agrivoltaics system will enable crops to grow beneath elevated photovoltaic panels. This not only optimizes land use, but also reduces water evaporation and provides shade-tolerant crops with an ideal microclimate.
Officials describe it as a forward-thinking solution that addresses rising energy demands while preserving rural heritage and food production.
A Green Future for Uleila del Campo
With abundant sunshine, flat land, and a community open to innovation, Uleila del Campo is well-positioned to become a showcase for agrivoltaic development in Andalusia. Local leaders hope the project will stimulate the economy, attract investment, and create new green jobs in solar installation, agriculture, and system maintenance.
This effort reflects a broader strategy in the renewable energy push throughout the Almería province.
Project Overview
- Location: Agricultural zone near Uleila del Campo
- Technology: Elevated agrivoltaic solar systems
- Purpose: Clean energy generation + crop cultivation
- Status: Under development, launch planned for 2026
According to developers, Uleila’s agrivoltaics model could serve as a blueprint for rural communities across Europe, offering long-term resilience to both climate and market pressures.
Learn More About Agrivoltaics
To understand how agrivoltaics work in practice, see this resource by the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems, one of Europe’s leading research bodies in the field.
Conclusion: Smart Energy Meets Sustainable Farming
As agrivoltaics gains ground in Europe, the Almería region is emerging as a testbed for its practical application. With the Uleila del Campo project, the province takes a bold step toward climate-smart agriculture and integrated energy innovation.
Follow more developments in agrivoltaics and renewable energy on our platform as the project progresses.
Sustainability
Parque El Boticario on the edge of Almeria has finally been fully renaturalised
Published January 12, 2026 | Category: Sustainability
TL;DR: After more than twenty years in limbo, Parque El Boticario on the edge of Almeria has finally been fully renaturalised. The 14-hectare site is now a functional peri-urban green space focused on biodiversity, climate adaptation and environmental education, following a €2.5 million public investment.
Parque El Boticario Becomes Almeria’s New Peri-Urban Green Lung
For years, Parque El Boticario was a half-finished promise on the outskirts of Almeria: planned, inaugurated, and then quietly left without a clear future. That chapter is now closed. The site has undergone a full environmental recovery and is being repositioned as a peri-urban green space designed for the realities of Almeria’s semi-arid climate.
The completed project covers a total area of 14 hectares, with around ten hectares actively restored. Rather than creating a conventional city park, the intervention focuses on landscape resilience, biodiversity recovery and low-impact public use.
Why this matters for Almeria
What makes Parque El Boticario relevant is not its size or budget, but its function. In a province defined by water scarcity, heat stress and fragmented green areas, peri-urban spaces like this play a specific role: buffering urban pressure while restoring ecological continuity at the city’s edge.
Unlike ornamental parks, El Boticario is designed as functional green infrastructure. Its value lies in soil recovery, habitat creation and microclimate regulation rather than visual landscaping. This positions the park closer to environmental infrastructure than to recreational urban design.
What “peri-urban” actually means in a semi-arid province
Peri-urban green spaces are increasingly seen as critical in semi-arid cities. They absorb extreme heat, slow surface runoff during intense rainfall, and create transitional zones between built areas and open landscape.
In Almeria’s case, this transition is particularly sensitive. The city sits between the coast, dry riverbeds and semi-desert environments. El Boticario acts as a buffer, reducing pressure on surrounding land while offering controlled public access to restored ecosystems.
Water logic over aesthetics
The project deliberately avoids water-intensive design. By prioritising native and drought-adapted species, irrigation demand is kept low and predictable. This approach reflects a broader shift in southern Spain: green spaces that acknowledge climatic limits instead of resisting them.
Rather than importing greenery, the park recreates local environmental systems. This makes maintenance more resilient and avoids the long-term degradation often seen in artificially irrigated parks.
Biodiversity as a system, not a slogan
El Boticario’s biodiversity value does not come from isolated species, but from the reconstruction of interconnected habitats. Arid zones, wetlands, ramblas and Mediterranean woodland coexist within a single managed space, allowing species movement and ecological interaction.
This mosaic approach is particularly relevant in Almeria, where fragmentation has historically limited biodiversity recovery. The park does not aim to be pristine, but functional.
Environmental education without “theme park” design
Environmental education here is integrated, not staged. The park’s design allows schools and visitors to experience ecosystems directly, without overlays of heavy signage or artificial interpretation.
With input from the University of Almeria, El Boticario can function as a living reference point for understanding climate adaptation, native landscapes and sustainable land management in practice.
Parque El Boticario. Designed for a Dry Climate
A key principle of the project is adaptation to water scarcity. Vegetation has been selected almost entirely from native and low-water species, reducing irrigation needs while restoring local ecosystems. This approach reflects a broader shift in how green infrastructure is planned in southern Spain: less ornamental, more ecological.
The restored landscapes recreate different natural environments found across the province, including arid and semi-desert areas unique in Europe, ramblas, wetlands, Mediterranean woodland and coastal mountain systems. The result is not a manicured garden, but a living representation of Almeria’s environmental diversity.
An Outdoor Environmental Classroom
Beyond its ecological role, El Boticario has been designed as a space for environmental education. Developed in collaboration with the University of Almeria, the park functions as an open-air classroom where schools and residents can learn about local ecosystems, climate adaptation and sustainable land management.
New walking paths, botanical routes and restored water features support this educational focus, while improved lighting and infrastructure ensure safe and controlled public access.
Realistic impact, not overselling
El Boticario will not transform Almeria overnight. It will not solve water scarcity, urban heat or biodiversity loss on its own. Its importance lies in scale-appropriate impact: restoring one neglected space properly, rather than spreading resources thinly across multiple symbolic projects.
As such, it sets a precedent. Not because it is perfect, but because it demonstrates a shift from unfinished promises to managed, long-term environmental infrastructure.
From Abandoned Project to Managed Green Space
The park will now be managed by the City of Almeria following a formal agreement with the regional government. The project forms part of wider environmental restoration policies led by the Junta de Andalucia’s Department of Sustainability and Environment. Additional facilities such as rest areas, play zones and a bird observation point are planned, reinforcing the park’s role as a space for low-impact leisure and nature connection rather than mass recreation.
More broadly, El Boticario represents a change in direction: reclaiming a neglected site and transforming it into infrastructure that supports urban resilience, public wellbeing and climate readiness.
It may not solve Almeria’s environmental challenges on its own, but as a restored landscape just minutes from the city, El Boticario is now a tangible example of how urban planning and nature can finally move in the same direction.
Follow more local environmental projects, conservation efforts and sustainability developments in our Sustainability section.
Sustainability
The City of Almeria will organise 20 guided nature routes
Published January 12, 2026 | Category: Nature & Environment
TL;DR: The City of Almeria will organise 20 guided walking routes in natural areas during 2026. The first walk takes place on January 25 along the Rio Adra trail, a low-difficulty route of almost 10 km. Registration is now open, with a maximum of 50 participants.
Almeria Launches 20 Guided Nature Walks in 2026, Starting with Rio Adra Route
The City of Almeria is launching a new guided walking programme in 2026 aimed at promoting an active, healthy and sustainable lifestyle. The initiative includes 20 organised routes through natural areas across the province and nearby regions, with the first walk scheduled for January 25 along the Rio Adra trail.
The programme is designed to encourage physical activity while enjoying Almeria’s diverse landscapes. Planned routes will cover coastal areas, mountain zones and mid-altitude terrain, with varying difficulty levels to accommodate people with different fitness levels.
According to the city’s Department of Active City, the walks combine exercise, nature and social interaction, making the programme both accessible and inclusive. Each route will be guided by specialised technical staff responsible for group coordination and safety throughout the walk.
First Route: Rio Adra Trail
The opening walk follows the Rio Adra trail, a route of nearly 10 kilometres with no technical difficulty. The walk will start at 9:00 am on January 25, with departure from the Maestro Padilla Auditorium in Almeria city.
Participation is limited to 50 people per route. A minimum number of registrations is required for each walk to take place. Participants are expected to bring their own water, food and suitable clothing.
Registration and Information
Registration for the Rio Adra walk is now open via the official municipal website:
Additional information is available by phone at 950 33 21 00 or via email at [email protected] and [email protected].
Upcoming Routes in 2026
The walking programme will continue throughout the year, with routes planned approximately every two weeks. Destinations include:
- Minas de Rodalquilar
- Ruta del Mamut
- Negratin and the Geopark Cathedrals
- La Cerra de Tijola
- La Bolera Reservoir
- Maro–Cerro Gordo cliffs
With this initiative, the City of Almeria reinforces its commitment to sport for all, healthy living and responsible use of the natural environment.
Browse the latest updates in our Nature & Environment category.
Nature & Environment
Sustainable Oceans: Almeria’s Alboran Sea Protected in Spain’s 2025 Marine Expansion
Published October 19, 2025 | Category: Nature & Environment
TL;DR: Spain has designated a vast 6,277 km² marine protected area off Almeria’s coast. The new “Banks and Gorges of the Alboran Sea” reinforces Natura 2000, safeguards deep-sea coral gardens and seven cetacean species, and pushes Spain toward its 30%-by-2030 ocean-protection goal.
Alboran Sea Marine Protected Area: Spain Expands Ocean Conservation off the Almeria Coast
Table of Contents
- Where Exactly Is the Alboran Sea?
- What’s Protected: Seamounts, Canyons & Cold-Water Corals
- Who Lives Here: Whales, Dolphins, Turtles & Seabirds
- Why This Area Matters: Atlantic–Mediterranean Mixing
- The Legal Backbone: BOE Order, Natura 2000 & INTEMARES
- What Changes Now: Management Plans & Precaution
- Almeria’s Link: Research, Ports & Responsible Tourism
- Threats & Challenges: From Trawling to Warming Seas
- How to Visit Responsibly
- Fast Facts & Timeline
- Final Notes
Where Exactly Is the Alboran Sea?
The Alboran Sea is the westernmost basin of the Mediterranean, stretching between southern Spain and North Africa immediately east of the Strait of Gibraltar. Off Almeria’s coastline, Atlantic inflows meet warmer, saltier Mediterranean waters, creating a dynamic oceanographic “mixing zone” that fuels rich marine life. The newly designated protected site—formally named the Bancos y Cañones del mar de Alborán (Banks and Gorges of the Alboran Sea)—covers 6,277 km² of offshore habitat in this basin. The official order was published in Spain’s Official State Gazette on 7 October 2025.
What’s Protected: Seamounts, Canyons & Cold-Water Corals
At the heart of the designation are submarine mountains, ridges and canyons that rise sharply from the seafloor. These structures create upwellings that bring nutrients toward the surface—hotspots where food webs concentrate. Extensive surveys by Spain’s oceanographic research network describe deep, cold-water coral communities—Lophelia pertusa, Madrepora oculata—and benthic gardens of gorgonians, sponges and deep-sea mollusks thriving on these hard substrates. In plain language: they’re underwater oases, rare and fragile.
Geologically, the Alboran basin is complex and tectonically active. The interaction between seafloor topography and currents helps maintain cooler, oxygen-richer micro-habitats in a warming Mediterranean—one reason scientists pushed for protection here for more than two decades. Spain’s formal listing recognizes these ecological values within the EU Natura 2000 framework, which protects habitats and species of community interest.
Who Lives Here: Whales, Dolphins, Turtles & Seabirds
The new MPA serves as a feeding and migration corridor for at least seven cetacean species: bottlenose (Tursiops truncatus), common (Delphinus delphis), and striped dolphins (Stenella coeruleoalba); Risso’s dolphin (Grampus griseus); short-finned pilot whale (Globicephala melas); fin whale (Balaenoptera physalus); and Cuvier’s beaked whale (Ziphius cavirostris). Loggerhead turtles (Caretta caretta) also traverse this “Alboran corridor,” and pelagic birds use the area as a foraging ground.
Researchers note a spatial pattern: coastal-loving dolphins tend to cluster near shallower seamounts and around Alboran Island, while beaked and pilot whales track deeper isobaths near the 1,000-metre line—exactly the kind of topography safeguarded by the designation. Protecting such gradients is key to conserving the full cast of marine megafauna that make Almeria’s offshore waters unusually vibrant.
Why This Area Matters: Atlantic–Mediterranean Mixing
The Alboran Sea is where Atlantic inflows pulse into the Mediterranean as distinct jets and eddies. These flows—modulated by seafloor ridges and canyons—enhance nutrient availability and primary productivity, which scale up to fish, turtles and whales. In other words, the physics of the place is the biology. Spain’s marine strategy explicitly prioritizes such oceanographic “engines” as anchors of its protected-area network.
There’s a regional storyline here too. Almeria’s coast and ports sit at the doorstep of this offshore engine. From university labs to local tour operators, the mixing of waters offshore ties directly to life onshore—through fisheries, ecotourism and even climate moderation along the coast.
The Legal Backbone: BOE Order, Natura 2000 & INTEMARES
Legally, the Alboran MPA enters Spain’s Natura 2000 network as a Site of Community Importance (SCI) on the road to Special Area of Conservation status. The BOE order of 7 October 2025 details its boundaries, scientific justification and governance triggers. Once the European Commission validates the listing, Spain has up to six years to adopt a site-specific management plan.
The designation dovetails with LIFE INTEMARES, Spain’s EU-funded flagship to reach 30% marine protection by 2030. INTEMARES coordinates science, governance and capacity building nationwide—driven by Fundación Biodiversidad under the Ministry for Ecological Transition (MITECO). Spain’s latest steps added over 17,000 km² of marine protection across five new offshore sites, with the Alboran Banks & Gorges as a lead piece in the western Mediterranean.
What Changes Now: Management Plans & Precaution
Designation is stage one. Next comes a management plan defining conservation objectives, seasonal restrictions, and zoning (no-take cores, research corridors, sustainable-use buffers). Spain typically applies precautionary measures while these plans are drafted: tighter controls on bottom-contact fishing gear over sensitive substrates; limits on underwater noise; and vessel-speed advisories in cetacean zones. The plan will be prepared by national and regional authorities with fishers, scientists and NGOs, using INTEMARES protocols and EU Directives as guardrails.
On the science side, monitoring will rely on IEO-CSIC vessels, passive acoustic arrays, seabed mapping and ROV surveys to check coral health and fishing impacts. Spain’s June 2025 policy note underscores the link between new MPAs and funded monitoring & enforcement—a critical ingredient for turning lines on a map into real conservation gains.
Almeria’s Link: Research, Ports & Responsible Tourism
For Almeria, this is both ocean and identity. Offshore protection feeds back to coastal life through more resilient fisheries, cleaner beaches and a stronger nature brand. It also gives local universities, research centres and coastal operators a clear framework for blue-economy development grounded in conservation.
- Research & Education. The University of Almeria and national institutes can leverage the MPA as a living lab—tracking whales and turtles, testing noise-reduction corridors, and studying how canyon upwellings affect productivity.
- Ports & Circularity. The province is already piloting circular projects linking the sea and low-carbon fuel. See our feature: Plastic to Biodiesel in Almeria.
- Responsible Marine Tourism. Dolphin- and whale-watching trips out of the Port of Almeria can incorporate citizen science and certified codes of conduct, transforming excursions into conservation experiences.
Threats & Challenges: From Trawling to Warming Seas
Cold-water corals are stunningly slow to grow; once damaged by bottom trawls or dumped gear, recovery can take decades to centuries. Beaked whales are highly sensitive to noise; turtles face bycatch risk; and the whole basin is warming and acidifying, altering carbonate chemistry that corals depend on. Effective management must therefore combine gear restrictions, noise mitigation, bycatch reduction and climate resilience—and fund them long-term. Spain’s 2025 agenda emphasizes new protected coverage paired with better tools for surveillance and stakeholder compliance.
Enforcement matters. If trawl tracks, illegal dumping or noisy transits persist over key habitats, the MPA risks becoming a paper park. INTEMARES gives Spain a platform and budget to step up monitoring and co-design solutions with the very communities that depend on the sea.
How to Visit Responsibly
Want to experience Almeria’s deep-blue frontier without leaving a footprint? A few simple choices go a long way:
- Choose accredited operators that follow distance, speed and noise guidelines for whales and dolphins.
- Pack out plastics—and pick up stray litter on beaches; the less that reaches the sea, the better for turtles and corals.
- Keep it quiet on the water: steady speeds, no sudden accelerations, and avoid chasing wildlife.
- Support citizen science: log sightings with the crew; these data help scientists map hotspots.
Fast Facts & Timeline
- Official name: Bancos y Cañones del mar de Alborán (Banks & Gorges of the Alboran Sea)
- Size: 6,277 km² offshore habitat in the Alboran basin
- Wildlife: deep-sea corals (Lophelia, Madrepora), gorgonians, sponges; cetaceans including fin and beaked whales; loggerhead turtles
- Programmes: Natura 2000 (EU Habitats/Birds Directives); LIFE INTEMARES; Spain target ≈ 30% by 2030
- Next steps: EC validation; management plan within six years; precautionary measures in force meanwhile
Final Notes
The Alboran Sea has always been Almeria’s quiet neighbor—vast, blue and mostly out of sight. This new marine protected area brings it into focus. It recognizes an ocean engine where geology stirs currents, currents feed life, and life—in all its whale-and-coral strangeness—anchors a coastal identity. For Spain, it’s a strategic step toward a connected network of well-managed MPAs. For Almeria, it’s an invitation to tell a bigger story: sustainability here doesn’t stop at the shoreline—it reaches deep beneath the surface.
For official background and ongoing updates, see Spain’s MITECO brief, the BOE Order (7 Oct 2025), the LIFE INTEMARES programme via Fundación Biodiversidad, and the IEO-CSIC for scientific updates.
About the author
KAI is the Sustainability & Regional Development Analyst at VisitingAlmeria.com.
With over 18 years of local insight into Almeria’s evolving economy and environment, KAI explores how the province is transforming through innovation, renewable energy, and community-driven change.
For more updates from across the province, visit our Nature & Environment category.
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