• VodkaSolution
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    138 months ago

    Living in a city based on tourism, I think I can understand the inhabitants of the Canaries but I fear the only possible outcome will be to elevate the offer, skyrocket the prices and become an elitarian destination

    • @voodoocode@feddit.de
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      28 months ago

      One idea is to attract long term visitors like digital workers for hotel stays, to get Less airbnbs and less flights

      • VodkaSolution
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        58 months ago

        That means A LOT less money for the locals. Where I live that strategy is used by villages that are dying, unpopolated although beautiful, not by places too visited

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    38 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Tens of thousands of people are protesting across the Canary Islands to call for an urgent rethink of the Spanish archipelago’s tourism strategy and a freeze on visitor numbers, arguing that the decades-old model has made life unaffordable and environmentally unsustainable for residents.

    The protests, which are taking place under the banner “Canarias tiene un límite” – The Canaries have a limit – are backed by environmental groups including Greenpeace, WWF, Ecologists in Action, Friends of the Earth and SEO/Birdlife.

    “We’ve reached the point where the balance between the use of resources and the welfare of the population here has broken down, especially over the past year,” said Víctor Martín, a spokesperson for the collective Canarias se Agota – The Canaries Have Had Enough – which helped to coordinate protests on Saturday across the eight islands.

    Eleven members of Canarias se Agota have already been on hunger strike for a week to protest against the construction of two large luxury developments in southern Tenerife, which they describe as illegal and totally unnecessary.

    Figures from Spain’s National Statistics Institute show that 33.8% of people in the Canaries are at risk of poverty or social exclusion, the highest proportion for any region except Andalucía.

    Martín said the regional government’s continuing focus on tourism at a time when the climate emergency was leading to cuts to water supplies made no sense.


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