
It's paradise lost as climate change transforms European summers
'It's hell,' said Daniel Pardo Rivacoba, who lives in Barcelona, and who spoke for a group fighting over-tourism — and its climate-change fueling flights. He saw the scorching sun not as an ally to keep the tourists away, but as a common enemy that would melt them both.
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Last year, Pardo Rivacoba's group went viral by organizing demonstrations against over-tourism that included spraying tourists with water guns. This year, he said, it was so hot that 'we used the water guns on ourselves.'
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Across the continent, June was the cruelest month so far. In Rome, tourists rotated around the city's sites as if spinning in an outdoor microwave. Opera singers in Verona passed out in their costumes.
But Spain has become the least fun-in-the-sun destination. Temperatures in the southwestern city of El Granado reached nearly 115 degrees (46 degrees Celsius), a national record for June. And there were other grim metrics. Last year, floods in Valencia killed more than 200 people; this year, experts say excess deaths, especially among the ailing and elderly, have risen sharply with the temperatures.
Climate change is also transforming the Spanish landscape, including the beach in Montgat, where increasingly frequent storms have washed away much of the sand.
'Every time we come, there is less and less sand,' said Susanna Martínez, 40, who had been going to the beach in Montgat with her family for a decade.
Barcelona, only a few miles away, has reported losing 30,000 square meters of sand over the past five years. Marina d'Or, outside Valencia, farther south, was envisioned by developers and families across Spain as a seaside resort, an emblem of the country's beach holidays. Now, storms have washed some of its beaches away, too. Experts have estimated the loss of hundreds of thousands of square meters of beach across the country, and warned about desertification.
Spain knows it has a problem. In a time of right-wing opposition to Europe's environment-protecting Green Deal regulations — 'greenlash,' it has been called — the progressive government of Spain has embraced an ecological transition.
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'The main risk humankind faces today, undoubtedly, is climate change,' said Sira Rego, a minister in the government led by Pedro Sánchez. She called responding to those changes the country's 'priority in terms of security.'
The government, proud of its well-performing economy, is working to attract hundreds of billions of euros in investments for sustainable energy to create hundreds of thousands of new green jobs. It seeks to invest in temperature prediction systems to foresee heat waves, and to train health care workers who will be forced to treat more heat-related illnesses. It is trying to increase energy efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.
At more local levels, cities including Barcelona are also trying to mitigate the damage wrought by a changing climate.
Laia Bonet, the city's first deputy mayor responsible for ecology and urban planning, said that Barcelona was 'especially exposed to the effects of climate change,' and that it was working to address the reality of a hotter city with higher sea levels and eroded beaches.
The city's priority, she said, is protecting vulnerable residents with hundreds of climate shelters. But it is also investing 1.8 billion euros (about $2.1 billion) to make buildings greener, expand green spaces, install 200 shade structures, and replace some pavements with dirt to better absorb and repurpose rainwater.
The city is also using sand recovered from construction projects to help preserve its beaches, which are a beloved public space for locals to cool off, as well as a guard against storm surges, and a crucial element in the city's identity as a tourist destination. About 15 percent of Barcelona's economy comes from tourism.
She said climate change had forced the city to think of its over-tourism problem differently, to come up with measures that addressed both. 'These are progressive policies that cities can implement as an antidote,' she said.
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Instead of changing their behavior, many Southern Europeans suffering during the sweltering heat waves have resorted to hatching escape plans. In Barcelona, three older Spanish women sitting in the shade across from the city's cathedral fantasized about cloudy Galicia in the north. And Romans with healthy travel budgets have started looking longingly at damp, chilly, often overlooked nations.
'It could happen that if it gets too hot, people could come to Belgium,' said Ann Verdonck, 45, from near Antwerp, who was on vacation with her family in Barcelona, where she said last month's temperatures were untenable. 'And then we will have too many people.'
But Pardo Rivacoba, the activist, said extreme heat would not get rid of over-tourism because the tourism industry is so cynical. If the summers became too hot, he feared, the industry would work to move school vacations to months when families could travel.
'The tourism industry,' he said, is 'ready to literally burn every piece of the calendar.'

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San Francisco Chronicle
20 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
What to know about the Grand Canyon as wildfires burn, claiming a historic lodge
Nearly 5 million people visited the Grand Canyon last year, from day trippers and campers to people sleeping overnight in historic lodges and cabins. This year will be different, at least for one portion of the park. A wildfire has torn through a historic lodge and ended the season for the canyon's North Rim, a place where visitors could find less bustle in one of the country's most iconic national parks. As firefighters continue to fight the blaze, here's what to know about Grand Canyon National Park. Bigger than Rhode Island The Colorado River cuts through Grand Canyon National Park for about 278 miles (447 kilometers), pushing across northwestern Arizona. The eastern boundary is near the state's northern border with Utah, while the western edge is near Nevada. Grand Canyon National Park is about 1,900 square miles (nearly 5,000 square kilometers), according to the National Park Service, which makes it bigger than Rhode Island. The park is unique because of its canyon walls, which boast horizontal layers of red, orange and purple rock. The average depth of the iconic formation is about a mile (1.6 kilometers), while the average width is about 10 miles (16 kilometers). 'Four Empire State Buildings stacked one atop the other would not reach the rim,' Lance Newman wrote in the introduction to the 2011 book, 'The Grand Canyon Reader.' The north and south rims Within the park are the north and south rims, which are the primary travel destinations because of their accessibility. The North Rim receives 10% of park visitors and is known for more quiet and solitude, according to the park service. It's open from mid-May to mid-October because of the snow. But the wildfires have closed it for the rest of the season, destroying a historic lodge and dozens of cabins. The South Rim is open all year. It's more bustling and boasts a historic district, which dates to when the first steam-powered train arrived in 1901. A car trip between the rims takes five hours, according to the park service. That's because there's only one way across the Colorado River by vehicle, and its 137 miles (231 kilometers) from the South Rim Village. Hiking between rims is a shorter distance, 21 miles (34 kilometers), though by no means easy. It includes crossing the river on a narrow foot bridge 70 feet (21 meters) above the water. Unexplored by Europeans for 235 years The Grand Canyon was formed with the shifting of tectonic plates, which lifted layers of rock into a high and relatively flat plateau, according to the park service. About 5 million to 6 million years ago, the Colorado River began to carve its way downward, slowly deepening and widening the gorge. The oldest human artifacts in the area date to about 12,000 years ago, when small bands of people hunted bison, the park service said. There were gradual shifts to agriculture, the building of pueblos and the development of trade routes. Today, 11 tribes have historic connections to the canyon, including the Hopi and the Diné (Navajo). The Spanish were the first Europeans to the see the Grand Canyon in 1540, according to the park service. Francisco Vázquez de Coronado and his Spanish army were searching for fabled cities of gold. 'The Hopi were able to fool the Spaniards into thinking that the area was an impenetrable wasteland and was not navigable anyway,' the park service wrote on its website, adding that the canyon 'was left unexplored by Europeans for 235 years.' In the late 1850s, an Army lieutenant explored the Grand Canyon in search of a viable trade route, the park service said. Joseph Christmas Ives described it as 'altogether valueless" and predicted it 'shall be forever unvisited.' The Grand Canyon began to draw much more interest after expeditions in 1869 and 1871 by geologist John Wesley Powell. Powell described rock layers in the canyon's towering walls: "creamy orange above, then bright vermilion, and below, purple and chocolate beds, with green and yellow sands.' 'You cannot improve on it' As the years went on, more explorers arrived by boat, on foot and on horseback, often with the help of Native American guides. Wealthy travelers came by stagecoach from Flagstaff to the South Rim in the 1880s. After the arrival of trains, the automobile became the more popular mode of travel in the 1930s. Early entrepreneurs charged $1 to hike down the Bright Angel Trail used by the Havasupai people whose current-day reservation lies in the depths of the Grand Canyon. President Woodrow Wilson signed legislation to create the park in 1919 but Teddy Roosevelt is credited for its early preservation as a game reserve and a national monument. He famously said: 'Leave it as it is. You cannot improve on it. The ages have been at work on it, and man can only mar it.'


Hamilton Spectator
20 hours ago
- Hamilton Spectator
What to know about the Grand Canyon as wildfires burn, claiming a historic lodge
Nearly 5 million people visited the Grand Canyon last year, from day trippers and campers to people sleeping overnight in historic lodges and cabins. This year will be different, at least for one portion of the park. A wildfire has torn through a historic lodge and ended the season for the canyon's North Rim, a place where visitors could find less bustle in one of the country's most iconic national parks. As firefighters continue to fight the blaze, here's what to know about Grand Canyon National Park. Bigger than Rhode Island The Colorado River cuts through Grand Canyon National Park for about 278 miles (447 kilometers), pushing across northwestern Arizona. The eastern boundary is near the state's northern border with Utah, while the western edge is near Nevada. Grand Canyon National Park is about 1,900 square miles (nearly 5,000 square kilometers), according to the National Park Service, which makes it bigger than Rhode Island. The park is unique because of its canyon walls, which boast horizontal layers of red, orange and purple rock. The average depth of the iconic formation is about a mile (1.6 kilometers), while the average width is about 10 miles (16 kilometers). 'Four Empire State Buildings stacked one atop the other would not reach the rim,' Lance Newman wrote in the introduction to the 2011 book, 'The Grand Canyon Reader.' The north and south rims Within the park are the north and south rims, which are the primary travel destinations because of their accessibility. The North Rim receives 10% of park visitors and is known for more quiet and solitude, according to the park service. It's open from mid-May to mid-October because of the snow. But the wildfires have closed it for the rest of the season, destroying a historic lodge and dozens of cabins. The South Rim is open all year. It's more bustling and boasts a historic district, which dates to when the first steam-powered train arrived in 1901. A car trip between the rims takes five hours, according to the park service. That's because there's only one way across the Colorado River by vehicle, and its 137 miles (231 kilometers) from the South Rim Village. Hiking between rims is a shorter distance, 21 miles (34 kilometers), though by no means easy. It includes crossing the river on a narrow foot bridge 70 feet (21 meters) above the water. Unexplored by Europeans for 235 years The Grand Canyon was formed with the shifting of tectonic plates, which lifted layers of rock into a high and relatively flat plateau, according to the park service. About 5 million to 6 million years ago, the Colorado River began to carve its way downward, slowly deepening and widening the gorge. The oldest human artifacts in the area date to about 12,000 years ago, when small bands of people hunted bison, the park service said. There were gradual shifts to agriculture, the building of pueblos and the development of trade routes. Today, 11 tribes have historic connections to the canyon, including the Hopi and the Diné (Navajo). The Spanish were the first Europeans to the see the Grand Canyon in 1540, according to the park service. Francisco Vázquez de Coronado and his Spanish army were searching for fabled cities of gold. 'The Hopi were able to fool the Spaniards into thinking that the area was an impenetrable wasteland and was not navigable anyway,' the park service wrote on its website, adding that the canyon 'was left unexplored by Europeans for 235 years.' In the late 1850s, an Army lieutenant explored the Grand Canyon in search of a viable trade route, the park service said. Joseph Christmas Ives described it as 'altogether valueless' and predicted it 'shall be forever unvisited.' The Grand Canyon began to draw much more interest after expeditions in 1869 and 1871 by geologist John Wesley Powell. Powell described rock layers in the canyon's towering walls: 'creamy orange above, then bright vermilion, and below, purple and chocolate beds, with green and yellow sands.' 'You cannot improve on it' As the years went on, more explorers arrived by boat, on foot and on horseback, often with the help of Native American guides. Wealthy travelers came by stagecoach from Flagstaff to the South Rim in the 1880s. After the arrival of trains, the automobile became the more popular mode of travel in the 1930s. Early entrepreneurs charged $1 to hike down the Bright Angel Trail used by the Havasupai people whose current-day reservation lies in the depths of the Grand Canyon. President Woodrow Wilson signed legislation to create the park in 1919 but Teddy Roosevelt is credited for its early preservation as a game reserve and a national monument. He famously said: 'Leave it as it is. You cannot improve on it. The ages have been at work on it, and man can only mar it.' Error! 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USA Today
20 hours ago
- USA Today
No passport, no problem: 5 US towns that feel like Europe
While an international jet set trip may not be feasible, travelers need not abandon their dreams of a European summer. This summer, idyllic destinations such as Gran Canaria in Spain and the Campania region in Italy trended among travelers, according to Expedia's Summer Travel Outlook. Those who are yearning to sip on an Aperol spritz in Positano but can't make the journey can find a similar experience right here in the U.S. Across the nation, there are several charming destinations offering the same iconic European ambience and natural beauty without the price tag – or effort – of crossing oceans. Here's another bonus: no passport needed. Here are five domestic gems to sub in for a dreamy European getaway, according to boat-renting platform Boatsetter. Round-trip vs one-way: Which airfare trick really saves you money? | Cruising Altitude Spain for St. Augustine, Fla. Dating back to the 1500s as the oldest city in the continental U.S., St. Augustine exudes a charm similar to the sunny coast of Spain. "Growing up in Florida, I didn't realize just how much St. Augustine mirrored the charm of coastal Spain – the architecture, the history, the colors," said Caitlin Choate, Boatsetter's chief marketing officer. Travelers can wander the picturesque town, relax at one of the white sand beaches Florida is famous for, or even explore a Spanish fortress dating from the city's colonial era. Italian Riviera for Catalina Island, Calif. Catalina Island seems like miles away from the U.S., even though it's just an hour off the coast of Southern California. The island's picturesque mountainous backdrop dotted with cliffside homes overlooking crystal-clear waters, plus a quaint main street and beach club, lends to the feeling of an Italian escape. "Catalina Island has an Italian Riviera vibe, and it's an easy day trip from Los Angeles or Long Beach," said Choate. "Rent a boat with a captain and snorkel the coves around the island before stopping in Avalon for ice cream." Switzerland for Coeur d'Alene, Idaho Making it out to the Alps isn't feasible for everyone, but Coeur d'Alene in Idaho provides travelers with a similarly stunning lakeside resort town. "Coeur d'Alene is like an alpine lake you'd find in Switzerland but with the laid-back energy of the Pacific Northwest," said Choate. Think glassy water with mountains for the backdrop. Quite an undiscovered hidden gem." Travelers can relax at the beach, take a boat out on the lake, or hike the miles of pristine nature trails. The Mediterranean for Santa Barbara, Calif. Located less than two hours from Los Angeles, Santa Barbara is known as the American Riviera for its chic and sunshine-drenched atmosphere, according to Travel + Leisure. "Santa Barbara has this effortless blend of California cool and European charm – white-stucco buildings, breezy marinas," said Choate. Travelers can enjoy the beaches tucked under cliffs, sip wine at one of the several wineries or explore the shops and restaurants along the pier. Greece for Tarpon Springs, Fla. With heavy influence from the largest population of Greek-Americans in the U.S., Tarpon Springs is perfect for travelers wishing for a Greek getaway. Set along Florida's Gulf Coast, Tarpon Springs' downtown mirrors a Greek village with splashes of white and blue architecture, delicious Greek cuisine and charming docks where sponge divers park their boats.