Storm Francis ravages Matalascañas promenade in Huelva

Storm Francis has demolished much of the 4.3-kilometer promenade in Matalascañas, Almonte (Huelva), sweeping away three beach bars and endangering nearby buildings. About fifteen residents have been evacuated due to collapse risks, as officials warn of further imminent damage. The incident highlights coastal erosion worsened by climate change and sand shortages near Doñana National Park.

Storm Francis has wreaked havoc on Huelva's coast, demolishing the Matalascañas promenade, a macro-urbanization in Almonte that hosts about 150,000 summer visitors. The waves damaged the 4.3-kilometer structure at multiple points and swept away three permanent beach bars, according to local town hall reports.

Fifteen residents were evacuated on Sunday due to fears that waves would undermine their homes' foundations, including the three-story Alcotán building. Affected resident Raquel Cazcón voiced her anxiety: “I fear my building will collapse and the foundations won't hold, because the water is still right up top and keeps hitting. Year after year, the tides erode and take away more and more sand.” The town council requested help from the Military Emergency Unit, citing reports confirming the building's stability is compromised.

Mayor Francisco Bella (independent) warned that another high tide could worsen conditions in the coming days, with the storm still ongoing. He blamed erosion on sand shortages plaguing the area for the past decade, worsened by breakwaters built decades ago in Huelva and Mazagón that halted the natural river deposit of 300,000 cubic meters annually. The storm also toppled the wastewater treatment plant's wall, risking environmental spills.

In 2018, the Ministry for Ecological Transition (Miteco) identified a need for 700,000 cubic meters of sand to bolster the beach, a project that started just a week ago after seven years of delay. Bella called for emergency measures and criticized the holdup: “We've had eight years of delay; the coast has been stripped bare.” The long-term fix is to relocate the promenade inland, estimated at 600 million euros, involving expropriations and demolitions of about 200 frontline buildings.

Environment Secretary of State Hugo Morán outlined palliative steps: sand replenishment and breakwater reinforcement for six million euros until June. He emphasized structural works amid climate change: “We have to change our way of relating to the sea, which is rising and taking up more surface area.” He added that the challenge demands a “cultural change” to adapt to an altered planet.

Nearby El Portil beach also suffered extensive sand loss from the storm.

Relaterte artikler

Flooded towns in Chaco province, Argentina, with submerged streets, stranded vehicles, evacuating residents, and heavy rain from extreme storm.
Bilde generert av AI

Extreme rains flood towns in Chaco province interior

Rapportert av AI Bilde generert av AI

A storm with record rainfall over 300 mm hit Chaco province interior on April 20, leaving towns underwater, roads impassable and several emergencies. Espinillo recorded 320 mm, while a factory in Juan José Castelli was flooded affecting 45 workers. The National Meteorological Service maintains an orange alert for storms.

Catalonia's government has updated the urban plan for the future Tres Chimeneas neighborhood in Sant Adrià del Besòs, raising the main street by three meters due to increasing flood risks from climate change. It also plans to densify public housing buildings to add around 100 affordable units. The changes address updated studies and lessons from recent storms.

Rapportert av AI

A forest fire declared at 13:15 in the area of Villanueva de los Castillejos in Huelva has been raised to emergency phase 1 of the Infoca Plan.

A massive water leak in Torres de Potrero neighborhood, Álvaro Obregón borough, created a cascade on Heliotropos and Mercadela streets, flooding homes and vehicles. At least 12 houses and two cars were affected, with no injuries reported. Authorities controlled 90% of the leak and deployed support.

Rapportert av AI

More than 10,000 protesters formed a human chain over three kilometers long in Es Trenc, Mallorca, on Sunday to reject the Omnibus Law approved by the Govern on May 26.

Dette nettstedet bruker informasjonskapsler

Vi bruker informasjonskapsler for analyse for å forbedre nettstedet vårt. Les vår personvernerklæring for mer informasjon.
Avvis