Costa Blanca
Marine Surveillance increases coastline patrols to protect posidonia seaweed

In order to safeguard posidonia seaweed, the Marine Surveillance Service examines 50,000 hectares of shoreline.
The Marine Surveillance Service of the Valencia region is currently surveying 50,000 hectares of coastline in an effort to preserve the posidonia meadows of the Valencian Community by creating a network to monitor marine species, ecosystems, and protected areas.
With the expansion of the surveillance network in 2024, this service—which is subordinate to the General Directorate of Natural and Animal Environment—has been present at sea for 810 days and has sailed more than 37,000 kilometres of the Valencian coastline, setting new records.
The largest deployment since the program’s inception in 2022, comprising a team of 19 marine professionals and eight vessels managed by the Ministry, is the surveillance device, as pointed out by Luis Gomis, Director General of Natural and Animal Environment.
Therefore, El Perelló, Dénia, Alcossebre, Oropesa del Mar, Xàbia, Calp, El Campello, and Torrevieja are the eight base ports from which the vessels embark for the work.
Two additional vessels will join the existing network of watchdogs in 2024 to do control and surveillance duties off the coasts of L’Albufera and Dénia. “This network for monitoring marine species, habitats and protected areas allows us to collect all the information of interest on nautical activity and to report on the ecological and regulatory importance associated with posidonia oceanica,” Luis Gomis stated.
In its three years of operation, the Marine Surveillance Service has successfully decreased the amount of anchors found in posidonia meadows. Environmental officials have also started boarding the service’s boats in September 2024 to report these breaches.
Five nautical clubs have begun a new initiative this year to disseminate regulations related to seagrass meadows: Club Náutico Oropesa del Mar, Marina El Portet in Dénia, Club Náutico in Moraira and El Campello, and the Real Club Náutico in Torrevieja.
Schedule for tracking
As part of the Posidonia monitoring plan’s presentation day in Alicante, the Spanish Department of Environment, Infrastructure, and Territory convened a group of specialists from throughout the country to assess the species’ situation in the Valencian Community.
The decline of our beaches, loss of biodiversity, and worsening water quality are all things that posidonia works to combat, as the head of the natural and animal environment directed attention to. “This species acts as a barrier against erosion, provides oxygen, and provides shelter for species of interest,” he continued.
Contamination by wastewater, hydrocarbons, and coastal building is a major threat to posidonia. Also, because people tend to anchor without thinking, water activities might lead to more direct attacks.
Preserving areas
Seagrass meadows, including Cymodocea nodosa meadows, are regulated for conservation in the Valencian Community by decree 64/2022. The Generalitat is designated as the entity responsible for surveillance, inspection, and control, and the necessity of a monitoring plan is contemplated in this decree.
Specifically, the conference-analyzed monitoring plan from 2024 defines a protocol for sampling places by depth ranges, from the beach to depths surpassing 25 meters, and investigates the conservation status of the Valencian Community’s meadows.
The project has enabled the creation of a network for monitoring the marine coastline and studying the nautical uses of each space in the Natura 2000 marine network. Researchers, law enforcement agents, and Maritime Rescue have received logistical support and technical advice from this network, thanks to the efforts of coastguards and environmental agents.
Our seagrass meadows “are currently in a good state of conservation, however, there is a wide margin for improvement in their recovery in those areas where they have been reduced or disappeared,” Gomis noted during this session. “It is our duty and our responsibility to redouble our efforts and work side by side towards this common goal,” he added, hence the reason.
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Costa Blanca
Elche mother sentenced to 19 years for the murder of her son and the abuse of her twins

A woman has been sentenced to a total of 19 years and seven and a half months in prison by the Jury Court of the Seventh Section of the Alicante Court, which is located in Elche. She was convicted of murdering her two-year-old son in Bigastro by suffocation after having routinely abused him, as she had done with her other sons.
The Court, which upheld the jury’s verdict, convicted her of one count of murder, another count of habitual abuse, and six counts of bodily harm. The Court considered the aggravating circumstance of kinship and the mitigating circumstances of confession, undue delay, and acting under the influence of drugs.
The convicted woman is required to pay €100,000 in compensation to each of the deceased’s two brothers, as well as an additional €10,000 to the deceased’s twin, for the injuries and after-effects he experienced as a result of the incident.
A house in the town of Bigastro was the residence of the mother and her children, who were two-year-old twins and a nine-year-old girl at the time, as indicated by the statement of proven facts in the sentence. The convicted woman struck the twins with a variety of objects on the head, torso, or extremities and shook them on at least six occasions, resulting in multiple fractures.
On June 11th, 2022, the woman returned from the park with the two children and, after putting one of them to bed, grabbed the other by the neck and squeezed him until he perished by strangulation, the attacks continued repeatedly, establishing a climate of peaceful disruption.
The jury determined that the defendant’s psychological state was exacerbated by her drug use since the age of 20, which had a detrimental impact on her willpower at the time of the homicide. The prosecution and defence concurred with the Prosecutor’s Office during the oral hearing, while the defendant acknowledged the facts. The Alicante Court’s sentence is not definitive and may be appealed to the Civil and Criminal Division of the TSJCV.
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Costa Blanca
A second runway at Alicante-Elche Airport has been rejected by the government

As per a parliamentary response to PP senator Agustín Almodóbar, the Government has disregarded the long-awaited second runway for the Miguel Hernández airport in Alicante-Elche, at least for the next few years. Almodóbar emphasised that the airport has experienced a surge in traffic of over two million travellers in a single year.
“Do you not believe that it would be necessary, given the increasing demand, and that the investment would be more than justified, as has been long demanded by Alicante institutions and society?” The Popular Party leader enquired, characterising the work that Pedro Sánchez’s administration had planned as “insufficient”.
Nevertheless, the Upper House’s response is unequivocal: “Alicante-Elche Miguel Hernández Airport currently possesses modern, secure facilities, as well as competitive pricing and an adequate capacity to satisfy air traffic demand and ensure the mobility of its residents.”
The government contends that the “airport manager” already conducts “planning” in accordance with “operational needs and expected traffic demand”, and AENA predicts “future behaviour” in the “sizing” of these infrastructures.
At present, the project is anticipated to encompass “adaptation of the terminal and traffic areas”, as stated in the technical description of the works that were tendered in January of last year. This is part of the first segment of Asistencia Técnica de Redacción de Proyecto (Technical Assistance for Project Draughting,) which is valued at €19.8 million.
In contrast, the second runway is “envisioned as the airport’s ultimate expansion in the current Master Plan and will be constructed only when it is deemed necessary to satisfy the anticipated demand, as determined by technical criteria.”
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Police prevent three squatters from taking over an Alicante home

According to sources from the City Council, three squatters were apprehended after the intervention of officers from the Sant Vicent del Raspeig (Alicante) Local Police and the Guardia Civil prevented them from invading a residence.
On Saturday March 15th, the Benemérita requested the municipal security force’s intervention in response to an alleged attempt by multiple suspects to occupy the property.
The main post had been previously contacted to report an additional purported illegal entry on Velázquez Street.
The Guardia Civil assisted the local police officers in the arrest after they made several arrangements with the householder. The police arrived immediately. The suspects were transported to the headquarters of the State Security Forces.
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