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Canary Islands protests against overtourism attract thousands

On Sunday, thousands of people in Spain's Canary Islands protested mass tourism, calling on authorities to limit visitors so as to protect residents from rising housing costs, traffic jams and overburdened service providers.

Demonstrators marched under the banner of "Canaries Have a Limit" in the main islands of the archipelago and in a number cities on the mainland. Some protesters chanted about tourism's impact on water supplies.

Hotel manager Juan Francisco Galindo in Tenerife said: "Tourism for the Canary Islands is important, but the collapse is complete."

In 2023, the local government issued an expropriation notice for his father's small island property due to approval of the luxury hotel project.

My father only has 70 square meters (750 square feet), which they are trying to take away. He said that his health has declined since the incident.

According to official statistics, more than 1 million tourists from abroad visit the Canary Islands every month. This compares to a population of 2.2 millions.

Spain is expecting even more tourists this year. In 2024 it had a record number.

Galindo stated that the number of beds in hotels had tripled from the 1970s, when the infrastructure on the islands was built. This has led to an increase in housing costs and traffic jams, as well as limited access to medical services during the peak tourism season.

Spain has seen several protests against the overtourism of other popular tourist destinations including Mallorca, Barcelona, and Malaga. Last year, similar demonstrations took place in the Canaries.

Sirlene Alonso is a lawyer from Gran Canaria who criticised the plans of the regional government to build more housing rather than limit tourist numbers.

The goal isn't to improve tourism, but rather to attract more tourists. "The number of tourists who live in this area and those who come here to visit us is crushing," she said.

Canary Island officials visited Brussels this week in order to secure European Union funding for affordable housing projects in the outermost regions of the island. Reporting by Borja suarez on Gran Canaria, and Corina pons in Madrid; Writing by Emma Pinedo, Ana Cantero and Helen Popper.

(source: Reuters)