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Is Spain about to be added to the UK’s ‘red list’?

Health officials from the UK are this week deciding if Spain should be added to UK’s 'red list' meaning a mandatory 10-day quarantine in a government-approved hotel at a cost of £1,750 per person.

Is Spain about to be added to the UK’s ‘red list’?
Image: Anastasia Gepp/Pixabay

According to recent reports from The Telegraph, the Department of Transport in the UK met with health officials on Wednesday, February 17th to discuss the new Covid variants and to assess whether Spain should be added to the ‘red list’.

This means that if confirmed, anyone travelling from Spain to the UK, including British citizens, will have to quarantine in a government-approved hotel costing up to £1,750 per person.

If Spain is added to the list, passengers to the UK will have to make bookings in advance through a dedicated online portal.

The £1,750 package will include assigned government transportation from the airport or ports, food and drinks, accommodation in a government approved facility and Covid-19 tests.

The government has so far contracted 16 hotels with 4,600 rooms, but more will have to be added if Spain is put on the list.

Currently around 500 people travel from Spain to the UK every day, meaning that many will have to fork out hefty price tags if this is confirmed.

Anyone failing to declare that they arrived from a ‘red list’ country and not buying the package to quarantine for 10 days in a designated hotel, will be fined between £5,000 to £10,000.

A final decision on the new list will be decided at a Cabinet Covid meeting this week.

Countries currently on the UK’s so-called ‘red list’ include several South American and African countries, as well as the United Arab Emirates. The only European country currently on the list is Portugal.

As well as Spain, UK health officials are also considering adding the United States to the list.

Currently all passengers to the UK, no matter which country they have travelled from, need to fill out a passenger locator form and provide proof of a negative PCR test taken no more than three days before departure.

They must also self-quarantine on arrival in the UK, although can do so at a private residence.

Under the current UK rules, travellers to the UK also need to purchase a travel testing package costing £210, which includes Covid-19 tests on day two and day eight of quarantine.

Failure to comply will result in fines of a £1,000 for not getting the first test and a further £2,000 penalty for anyone who doesn’t get the second test. Full details can be found here

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TOURISM

Spain’s Canaries rule out tourist tax and property ban for non-residents

The Canary Parliament has voted against introducing an ecotax for holidaymakers or banning the sale of properties to non-residents, following huge protests over the weekend against mass tourism in the Spanish archipelago.

Spain's Canaries rule out tourist tax and property ban for non-residents

The Canary Islands’ political sphere is attempting to appease their almost two million inhabitants with measures which will protect the islands’ nature from rampant overdevelopment derived largely from their ever-growing tourism industry. 

This comes after on April 20th tens of thousands of protesters took the streets of all eight Canary Islands and European cities such as London, Berlin and Madrid under the slogan “The Canary Islands have a limit”. 

READ ALSO: Mass protests in Spain’s Canary Islands decry overtourism

On Monday, President of Tenerife’s Cabildo government Rosa Dávila proposed an environmental tax, or ecotax, one of the main demands of the protests’ organisers. 

Proceeds from this ecotax “would go entirely to the protection and recovery of protected natural spaces”, Dávila said, such as the Teide National Park or the lush laurel forests of Anaga Rural Park. 

It is unclear if such an ecotax in Tenerife would take the shape of the usual tourist tax that exists in numerous cities in Spain and in 21 countries across Europe, which usually is a small amount added each day to holidaymakers’ hotel bill. 

In any case, at Tuesday’s plenary session in the Canary Parliament the right-wing Popular Party opposed such a measure across the archipelago, with their leader and vice president of the islands Manuel Domínguez saying “we are not in favour of creating a tax for sleeping in a hotel, a caravan or a holiday home”.

The motion presented by centre-left coalition Nueva Canarias-Bloque Canarista (NC-BC) also included other proposals such as a moratorium on new hotel beds, banning the sale of properties to non-residents and limiting Airbnb-style holiday lets, suggestions the PP and other Canary political parties shunned.

The leader of the Canaries’ Ashotel and CEHAT hotelier associations Jorge Marichal has also unsurprisingly voiced his opposition to a possible tourist tax, shifting the blame instead onto the proliferation of short-term holiday lets and their impact on Tenerife’s rental market.

Banner at April 20th’s protest in Tenerife reads “Tourismphobia doesn’t exist, they’re lying, it’s the excuse politicians and hoteliers use to not introduce an ecotax nor change the tourism model”. Photo: Alex Dunham

An NC-BC spokesperson stressed that every 15 days a new emergency is declared in the Canary Islands – water, energy or housing – which is “evidence that something is colliding, that something is not right, and that’s what people expressed during these days”.

READ ALSO: ‘The island can’t take it anymore’ – Why Tenerife is rejecting mass tourism

Catalonia and the Balearic Islands both charge holidaymakers tourist taxes. Spain’s Valencia region was also planning to until the right-wing government now in power revoked the law early in 2024. 

However, the measures that were approved by the Canary Parliament were charging an entrance fee to visit Tenerife’s key sites and natural spaces, from which residents of the Canary Islands would be exempt from paying, and no offering up anymore land to hotels and other tourist complexes.

For his part, the regional president of the Canaries Islands Fernando Clavijo, whose national party Coalición Canaria is also against an ecotax, has suggested that an “environmental VAT” would be a “more efficient” way of improving the quality of life of islanders, as it would redistribute the wealth of tourism and advance social policies.

The reticence of the governing elite to adopt drastic measures that will lead to a more sustainable tourism model in the Canaries is unlikely to go down well among disgruntled locals, whose turnout at Saturday’s protests prove how much they want change.

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