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As anti-tourism protests grow in Europe, we need a rethink – but that's no reason to stop travelling
As anti-tourism protests grow in Europe, we need a rethink – but that's no reason to stop travelling

The Guardian

time18-06-2025

  • The Guardian

As anti-tourism protests grow in Europe, we need a rethink – but that's no reason to stop travelling

After coordinated protests across Europe last weekend, it's easy for the ethically conscious tourist to feel uncertain. Across southern Europe – and particularly in Spain, Italy and Portugal – there are headlines blaming visitors for everything from overcrowding to housing shortages. In gentrifying neighbourhoods, slogans such as 'Tourists go home' have appeared on walls and windows, with some angry residents grabbing headlines by squirting water pistols at tourists. Does that mean a golden age of tourism is over? No. Does the complicated relationship between those who want to visit the world's most interesting places and those who live in them need a reset? Probably. For the most part, protesters are calling for a total overhaul of a model of tourism that, they argue, drives up housing costs, harms the environment and creates low-paid, unstable jobs – while concentrating profits in the hands of a few. I've seen this first-hand. I live in Lavapiés, a vibrant and multicultural neighbourhood near Madrid's main train station. When I moved here 12 years ago, the area was a haven of traditional bars and restaurants and independent shops. Today, many of those restaurants – once offering a full menú del día for €8 (£6.80) – have doubled their prices. A recently built Ibis hotel, complete with a digital price board resembling a petrol station display, now advertises fluctuating nightly rates of about €150 to €250. Local businesses have been replaced by ground-floor tourist accommodation, with passersby able to peer straight into capsule bedrooms from the street. Lavapiés has one of the highest concentrations of unlicensed tourist rentals in Madrid. These small flats, originally built in the 18th and 19th centuries to house the city's growing industrial workforce, remained affordable for centuries. Now, thousands of such flats are listed on Airbnb at rates rivalling those in the city's wealthiest neighbourhoods. But tourists aren't choosing these places maliciously – short-term rental platforms offer cheaper, more flexible options for groups, especially in a market where a basic hotel room can easily cost €100 or more a night. This is not just a story of tourists replacing local people; it's one of policy failure and economic imbalance. In Madrid, decent food is often still relatively affordable – but the same can't be said for accommodation. The charming, no-frills guesthouses with lace curtains and wrought-iron balconies are disappearing fast, and the gap they leave behind is being filled by unlicensed rentals in former homes. There are roughly 15,000 illegal tourist apartments in Madrid alone, rising to more than 66,000 across the country. To its credit, Spain's leftwing coalition government has attempted to regulate rents and pledged to build more housing. But these plans, combined with resistance from regional governments, fail to address the immediate impact that tourist rentals have on the availability of affordable homes. In the case of Madrid, the regional government, presided over by the rightwing People's party (PP), has refused to declare 'high-tension areas' in order to allow city councils to limit rent increases as provided for in the new national legislation. Likewise, the PP-dominated Madrid city council recently approved a modification of town planning rules, formally separating tourist accommodation from residential buildings. Although the official line is that this is a step towards protecting housing for local people, it has in reality paved the way for entire buildings to be converted into tourist-only properties and made it easier to transform ground-floor commercial premises into tourist lets. As southern Europe's cities and islands have passed a tipping point, some are calling for an outright ban on tourist flats, starting with those that are unlicensed. That may be necessary, but solving the housing crisis will take more than just tighter regulations and housebuilding – the other half of the equation is addressing the lack of decent, mid-range places for tourists to stay. Spain continues to build hotels, but too many new developments are glitzy four- and five-star projects aimed at luxury travellers. This shortage of modest, comfortable accommodation mirrors the broader shortage of affordable housing for residents. As Europe responds with growing resentment towards tourists, many people are asking: is it even possible to enjoy a trip without contributing to the problem? Can you still visit Madrid, Barcelona or the Canary Islands without encountering the 'Tourists go home' signs – or being squirted with water pistols? Should you? The answer is yes. First, it's important to put the water pistol incidents in perspective: these are symbolic, isolated acts and far from the norm. More importantly, tourism is vital to Spain's economy, accounting for roughly 12% of GDP. The country wants tourists, but that doesn't mean business as usual should continue. National and regional governments, and city councils, must do far more to regulate short-term rentals, support local communities and invest in affordable infrastructure – for residents and visitors. But travellers have an important role to play too: by choosing accommodation designed for tourists wherever possible; by learning about housing pressures in the places they visit; or by exercising judgment about where and when to travel. Opting to visit a resort town on the mainland rather than a city on an island might put less pressure on local communities and resources, for example. Times can be tense, but don't let guilt define your presence as a tourist. Feeling bad for visiting a place only plays into resentment and shifts the focus away from where it belongs: on deficits in housing and tourist accommodation. My advice is no more water pistols: instead, plan and build so countries work for residents and tourists. Leah Pattem is a multimedia journalist based in Spain

Jalisco boosts tourism sector with historic hotel investment
Jalisco boosts tourism sector with historic hotel investment

Travel Daily News

time10-06-2025

  • Business
  • Travel Daily News

Jalisco boosts tourism sector with historic hotel investment

Jalisco announces $1 billion hotel investment through 2028, adding 4,578 rooms to boost tourism growth ahead of the 2026 FIFA World Cup. DestiNEW YORK, NEW YORK – Signaling sustained economic growth in Jalisco and its emergence as Mexico's investment hub, Governor Pablo Lemus Navarro this week announced a historic $1 billion investment in new hotels aimed at strengthening the state's tourism sector. Private investors will allocate more than US $1 billion between 2025 and 2028, adding 4,578 rooms to the state's hotel capacity. A total of 38 new hotels will be built across the Guadalajara metropolitan area, Puerto Vallarta, Costalegre, and other key destinations. 'The tourism sector will be a fundamental pillar of economic growth in Jalisco. We will exceed 90,000 rooms throughout the state by 2030,' said Governor Pablo Lemus. Mauro Garza Marín, Jalisco's coordinator of economic growth and development, joined Lemus at the announcement. The governor emphasized that the administration's economic development strategy is yielding results, citing growth in foreign direct investment, job creation, and improvements in wage poverty, according to data from the Mexican Social Security Institute. Michelle Fridman Hirsh, the state's secretary of tourism, said the record-breaking investments are a result of strong government support and a robust tourism infrastructure. Jalisco ranks second nationally in hotel offerings and according to the federal Ministry of Tourism, Jalisco contributes 7.4% of Mexico's tourism GDP. From January to April 2025, 11 million people visited Jalisco – a 1.6% increase compared to the same period in 2024. Fridman also noted growth in beach tourism, Magical Towns, lodging, and passenger traffic at Guadalajara International Airport, which continues to expand its domestic and international routes. The state aims to surpass 90,000 available rooms by 2030. Jalisco currently has 2,821 hotels, offering 83,067 rooms. 'This year, we are going to increase our training and certification numbers for tourism service providers in the state. This initiative will undoubtedly help investors continue betting on Jalisco, as it ensures legal certainty, demonstrates strong support from the state government and reinforces Jalisco's position as a leading global destination for tourism,' Fridman said. Bernardo Aguilar Martínez Negrete, president of the Jalisco Hotel Association, said the industry is committed to solid investments and that the state offers a reliable environment for development. 'This is a historic moment to launch so many new projects in such a short time,' Martínez Negrete said. 'At the Hotel Association, we see this as a great opportunity to consolidate our position as the country's leading tourist destination in the coming years.' The 2026 FIFA World Cup is expected to bring more than 2.5 million visitors to Jalisco. Twelve of the 38 new hotels are scheduled to open before the tournament begins. Dollar amounts are approximate, based on an exchange rate of 18 pesos per U.S. dollar.

Thousands protest against Overtourism in Spain's Canary Islands
Thousands protest against Overtourism in Spain's Canary Islands

Asharq Al-Awsat

time18-05-2025

  • Asharq Al-Awsat

Thousands protest against Overtourism in Spain's Canary Islands

Thousands of people protested against mass tourism in Spain's Canary Islands on Sunday, urging authorities to limit the number of visitors to protect local residents from soaring housing costs, traffic congestion and overburdened services. Marching under the banner "Canaries have a limit", demonstrators took to the streets in all of the archipelago's main islands and in several cities in mainland Spain. Some chanted about the effects of tourism on water supplies. "Tourism is very important for the Canary Islands, but we have to realize that the collapse is total," Juan Francisco Galindo, a hotel manager in Tenerife, told Reuters. His father owns a small island property on which the local administration issued an expropriation order in 2023 due to the approval of a luxury hotel complex project. "Those 70 square meters (750 square feet) that they want to expropriate are all my father has. His health situation has deteriorated since this happened," he said. More than 1 million foreign tourists visit the Canary Islands each month, compared to a local population of 2.2 million, according to official data. Spain, which had a record number of tourist arrivals in 2024, expects even more visitors this year. Galindo said the number of hotel beds had tripled since the 1970s when the islands' infrastructure was built, leading to sky-rocketing housing costs, traffic jams and limited access to health services during peak tourism season. Spain has witnessed several protests against overtourism in other popular holiday destinations, including Mallorca, Barcelona and Malaga. Similar demonstrations were held in the Canaries last year. Sirlene Alonso, a lawyer who lives in Gran Canaria, criticized the regional government's plans to build more housing instead of limiting tourist numbers. "The goal is not tourism quality, but that more and more tourists come. The number of tourists and people who come to live here is crushing us," she said. Canary Island officials travelled this week to Brussels to seek European Union funds for affordable housing in the region's outermost areas.

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