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Activists protest spending EU 'green' funds on Spain ski resort

Activists protest spending EU 'green' funds on Spain ski resort

Spanish environmentalists have called on the European Union to investigate the use of €26.4 million of “green” economic recovery funds to join two ski resorts in the rapidly warming Pyrenees mountain range.

Five activist groups sent a delegation to Brussels for meetings this week with EU officials. They want greater scrutiny of a project they claim will cause irreversible damage to the glacial valley of Canal Roya in the Aragon region.

The EU’s €724 billion COVID recovery programme is supposed to support member states to “build a greener, more digital and more resilient future,” with stringent rules on impacting biodiversity, water use and carbon emissions.

The activists argue joining the resorts of Astún-Candanchú and Formigal with an 8-km cable car violates these conditions. The plan was approved by Spain’s tourism ministry in December.

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“This is a space of enormous environmental quality, and serves as a green corridor for the passage of animal populations such as the bearded vulture or other flora and fauna characteristic of the area,” says Marina Gros, spokesperson for Ecologists in Action.

Gros criticised the “opacity” of the Aragon regional government in its management of pandemic recovery funds.

She accused Spain's central government of hypocrisy for approving the project, given its recent trumpeting of its green credentials.

“These funds - supposedly for sustainable tourism - are being dedicated more than 80% to only four projects (in Aragon) based on snow-based tourism,” she said.

After trying and failing to stop the project domestically, Ecologists in Action have joined with groups including Greenpeace and WWF to tackle the issue in Brussels.

A petition to stop the cable car project from going ahead has so far garnered almost 50,000 signatures on the 'Change.org' website.

Critics argue that skiing is neither financially nor environmentally sustainable in the rapidly warming mountain range.

Many resorts draw water from nearby streams or reservoirs and typically use compressed air and electricity to blow snow into piles on the slopes when it’s cold.

Pyrenees: A mountain range warming with higher-than-average temperatures

Spanish scientists said in 2021 that the Pyrenees’ glaciers will likely be reduced to ice patches in the next two decades due to climate change.

The mountains have suffered a 1.5-degree Celsius overall temperature increase since the 19th century. This is higher than average.

Spain was one of the first EU countries to apply for and receive funds from the EU pandemic recovery fund, and stands to be among its main beneficiaries.

It is set to receive a total of €140 billion, half indirect transfers, half in loans.

The European Court of Auditors warned this month of insufficient checks and safeguards on how EU member countries spend the 724 billion euros of pandemic recovery funds.

A visiting EU Parliament delegation urged the Madrid government in February to be more transparent and flexible in its use of the funds and in providing public information about them.