Canal Nou workers carry on regardless as liquidators barred from building take legal action

ORDERS by the Valencia regional government to take Canal Nou and Ràdio Nou off air now that the closure of Radio TV Valenciana (RTVV) has become official have fallen on deaf ears – at least 40 workers in the studio have refused to leave the building and are broadcasting via a different frequency.

And Canal Nou (Channel 9) has continued to show programmes throughout the night and attempts have been made to prevent the liquidators from entering the control room to disconnect the cables and take the TV station off air.

Staff were allowed to enter in twos yesterday (Thursday) evening to collect their belongings, but faced with the multiple rebellion, police have been stopping them getting in since.

However, at around 02.00hrs, a number of employees managed to dodge the barriers and get back into their old workplace.

They have all been told via email that their job contracts have now ceased, but this has not stopped them going to work at the start of their usual shifts.

The overnight presenter on Canal Nou says no formal instructions were given to cease broadcasting, hence the team has continued to do so.

Some time around 04.15hrs this morning, head of security at RTVV met with the chief of police and the chairman of the committee for the company.

Vice-chairwoman Salut Alcover says that if the regional government has not taken the show off air yet, it is because they \’do not even know how to cut a cable\’.

“And if they don\’t even know how to cut through a wire, how are they supposed to govern the region of Valencia?” She wondered.

In a last-ditch attempt to force workers\’ hands and cease broadcasting, the three members of the liquidation committee have presented emergency court action against staff for \’illegal occupation\’ of the building, but the judge has not admitted the complaint.

A mass demonstration outside the regional government headquarters has been planned by RTVV\’s board of directors for 11.00hrs today (Friday) to condemn the closure of the radio and TV station, and at noon, another protest over unpaid wages will take place.

By: ThinkSpain , Friday, November 29, 2013

via Canal Nou workers carry on regardless as liquidators barred from building take legal action.

Ex-Castellón chief Fabra sentenced to four years for tax fraud

Provincial court convicts Popular Party veteran on four charges worth 700,000 euros

LORENA ORTEGA Castellón 25 NOV 2013 – 14:54 CET

Carlos Fabra, the former chief of Castellón province who became famous for building a planeless airport featuring a large statue in his honor, has been sentenced to four years in prison for tax fraud.

The anticorruption public prosecutor had requested an eight-year jail sentence for the Popular Party (PP) politician on four counts against him related with his not declaring income of almost two million euros to the tax office between 1999 and 2004 – a fraud worth almost 700,000 euros.

The Castellón provincial court absolved him of two other charges of influence peddling and bribery.

Fabra’s ex-wife was also sentenced to two years in prison on two other tax fraud charges.

The sentence is the culmination of a 10-year investigation into the man who headed the provincial council of Castellón, part of the Valencia region, between 1995 and 2011.

In the last session of the trial in October, the public prosecutor considered Fabra’s responsibility proven and emphasized the accusations of tax fraud: “He is not just any fraudster, he was president of the provincial council and while he demanded taxes he was committing fraud in the background.”

The sentence, which was made known on Monday, absolved the businessman who reported Fabra and his ex-wife of crimes of influence peddling and bribery. The ex-senator Miguel Prim, also charged with influenced peddling, was similarly cleared.

via Ex-Castellón chief Fabra sentenced to four years for tax fraud | In English | EL PAÍS.

Castellón airport needs a further three million euros to open

 Castellón 8 NOV 2013 – 19:47 CET

The airport in Castellón — which has become notorious both at home and abroad for never having received a single plane — will require a minimum additional investment of three million euros before it will receive the authorization and permission it needs to open. That’s according to the conditions included in the tender published this week by the Valencia regional government for companies interested in the commercial exploitation and maintenance of the airport.

The baggage hall at Castellón airport, which has yet to receive any flights since it was inaugurated in 2011. / ÁNGEL SÁNCHEZ

The baggage hall at Castellón airport, which has yet to receive any flights since it was inaugurated in 2011. / ÁNGEL SÁNCHEZ

The regional government has budgeted 25 million euros for the management of the airport over the next 20 years. But before the planes finally arrive, the region will have to finalize the documentation needed for the State Air Safety Agency (AESA) to certify that the airport complies with all of the requirements for operation. The airport is still lacking equipment and infrastructure, such as computer systems and software, the cost of which has been estimated at three million euros.

The government has decided that the company that wins the tender will have to assume this new cost. The public company Aerocas, which was set up to manage the airport project, will assume any cost overruns from the installation of the required equipment and infrastructure, according to the government documentation, “providing that it can be irrefutably proven that the planned investment of three million euros has been made.”

Former provincial leader Carlos Fabra — who is currently involved in a court case on accusations of corruption — inaugurated the airport back in March 2011. But at the time, the application for the certification process had not even begun. The time frame forecast for obtaining all of the necessary permits was six months, but the lack of proper documentation presented by the former managing company and the need to carry out further work on the airport — such as the lengthening of the runway — meant long delays.

The former managing company, Conaer, was supposed to have taken care of the certification of the airport. But a court case that saw Aerocas obliged to pay out 120 million euros for the additional work on the airport was symptomatic of Conaer’s slovenliness.

Aerocas publicly complained about the failure of Conaer to respect its commitments, not only for having left much of the work uncompleted but also because of its failure to present the documentation required.

But even after Aerocas broke off relations with the former managing company, it failed to complete the certification process. If the new tender is successful, the airport still won’t be ready to open until next year, given that the process of securing the certification will take around six months.

The details of the tender also explain that Aerocas will assume the costs of structural elements, such as repairs to the terminal. The successful managing company will then be able to choose between charging the regional government a maximum of 25 million euros over 10 years, independently of the passenger traffic achieved, or a payment system based on the number of people who arrive and leave from the airport.

The regional government opted for a new tender in the summer, after a failed attempt to sell the airport and after commissioning a new viability study.

via: Castellón airport needs a further three million euros to open | In English | EL PAÍS.

The law finally catches up with former Castellón cacique Fabra

Bringing the PP baron to court has been like running an obstacle course

 Castellón 2 OCT 2013 – 19:23 CET

The trial of former Castellón provincial chief and powerful Popular Party (PP) baron in the region of Valencia, Carlos Fabra, for alleged influence-peddling, bribery and tax fraud began on Wednesday, a decade after the first accusations were lodged against him.

In its written allegations, the popular prosecution in the form of the consumer protection group Unión de Consumidores described Fabra as a “magician in obtaining illegal ends.”

Carlos Fabra leaving the provincial High Court of Castellón on Wednesday. / DOMENECH CASTELLÓ (EFE)

Carlos Fabra leaving the provincial High Court of Castellón on Wednesday. / DOMENECH CASTELLÓ (EFE)

Unlike on other occasions he has appeared in court the 67-year-old Fabra, who faces a jail sentence of up to 13 years and a fine of 1.9 million euros if found guilty, was not accompanied by anyone from his party.

Prosecutors have accused Fabra and his former wife, María Amparo Fernández, of defrauding the Treasury of some 700,000 euros between 1999 and 2003. However, Fabra’s lawyer on Wednesday argued that tax inspectors who handled the case could not be considered as independent expert witnesses as they are administration assistants of the Anti-Corruption Prosecutor’s office.

The public prosecutor also claims Fabra acted as an intermediary for third parties with public administrations and accepted money for doing so.

The three magistrates conducting the trial are the same ones that attempted to have the accusation of taking bribes lodged against Fabra thrown out. Neither the state nor the public prosecutor have questioned their fitness to preside over the trial.

Since the case began in December 2003 — following accusations by a businessman that Fabra had taken bribes to intervene with the Agriculture Ministry to obtain permits — nine judges and four prosecutors have been involved in it. While the investigation proceeded, Fabra continued in his post as Castellón provincial chief, handling public money and presiding over the PP’s affairs in his particular fiefdom.

Part of the public’s money went to build an airport at Castellón, which has never been used as such, with the facilities dominated by a huge statue of Fabra himself. That was just one of several pharaonic monuments to human folly and hubris that marked a boom period in the region fueled by a massive real estate bubble.

During that period no one in the PP demanded that Fabra account for the accusations lodged against him. The head of the PP and now prime minister, Mariano Rajoy, at one point lauded Fabra as an “exemplary citizen.”

Fabra even tried to prevent the distribution of newspapers that had reported on the case and the judge who eventually formalized the accusation against him, Jacobo Pin, felt the need to seek the protection of the General Council of the Judiciary (CGPJ), the legal watchdog, after claiming that the Castellón Provincial High Court, the president of which was a personal friend of Fabra, had tried to put pressure on him to drop the case. Pin’s complaint went all the way to the Supreme Court, who gave the magistrate “total freedom” to proceed with the case.

After the Castellón Provincial High Court in 2010 threw out four of the five tax fraud charges against Fabra because they had exceeded the statute of limitations, it was again the Supreme Court that intervened to over-rule that decision.

Members of Fabra’s family were also included in the investigation after a report found that it had quadrupled its combined wealth in five years, but eventually only his former wife was formally accused. Fabra himself won a major prize in the national lottery no less than four times. One way of laundering illegally obtained money is to purchase winning lottery tickets.

Fabra has denied all the charges against him and at one point defended himself by saying: “I have never personally benefitted from my position as provincial chief of Castellón or as president of the Popular Party in the region. My public duties have never brought me any gain or revenue or than my official remuneration.”

via http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/10/02/inenglish/1380734613_504452.html

Work halted on giant gas storage plant after minor earthquakes detected in area

EU-backed facility was due to open this summer, and can store 50 days’ of the country’s needs 

The Industry and Energy Ministry has halted activity at the Castor offshore subterranean gas storage plant after some 200 minor earthquakes were detected last week around the area of Vinarós, on the Ebro Delta in the province of Castellón.

The EU-backed facility, Spain’s largest, was due to open this summer, and has the capacity to store 50 days’ worth of the country’s natural gas needs. But for the last year many local residents, particularly fishermen in the Ebro River delta, have complained about the impact of the vast site, which is located immediately off the coastline.

Developed by Spain’s ACS and Dundee Energy of Canada, Castor is not yet online, and is at the phase of injecting the so-called cushion gas needed to provide the pressurization to extract remaining gas from a storage facility.

In a statement on September 26, the Industry Ministry ordered the injections to be stopped, calling for a detailed report from the country’s National Geographic Institute (IGN) on the seismic activity detected in the area.

Emilio Carreño, director of the IGN, said scientists were puzzled as to why the mini earthquakes were taking place so long after gas injections had stopped. The plant stopped injecting gas on September 16.

Carreño says the IGN had detected 220 mini earthquakes in less than a month, the strongest registering 3.6 on the Richter scale on September 24. He said that the seismic activity was taking place in an area that was normally calm.

The facility takes gas from the national grid for storage and pumps it back into the grid when it is needed, and is based on the geological structure of the old depleted Vinarós Castellon offshore oilfield. A 19-bank international consortium, five of which are Spanish, provided the $1.6 billion in financing. The site will be connected to the coast via a 13.6-mile-long offshore pipeline.

Spain has no hydrocarbons and imports more than 99 percent of its gas needs, making it Europe’s largest importer of liquefied natural gas (LNG), accounting for almost a half of European imports.

Gas consumption is rising quickly. The Arab Spring has highlighted the strategic importance of the Castor project to provide reliable storage of LNG. Algeria is Spain’s biggest supplier, making up around a third of imports. In an earlier bid to diversify supply, in 1998 the government passed legislation restricting any single country from supplying more than 60 percent of Spain’s natural gas imports. Spain is also supplied by Nigeria, Qatar, and Trinidad and Tobago.

The earthquakes have been low intensity, but affected around 75,000 people living along the coastline between the towns of Alcanar in Tarragona, to Peñíscola in Castellón, as well as prompting criticism from environmental groups. The authorities in the town of Benicarló called on the industry ministry to halt the gas injections “until the seismic situation was under control.”

Alcanar’s fishing community also accuses Escal UGS, Castor’s leading contractor, of damaging their nets and says that fishing boats cannot operate within a half-mile radius of the facilities. Escal UGS has paid some financial compensation to local fishermen, but they are still complaining about diminishing catches and are demanding a further 100,000 euros in compensation for damages.

Via http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/10/01/inenglish/1380633532_298816.html

A €150 Million Airport That’s Never Been Used

I reach Castellón, a somewhat sleepy coastal city on the Mediterranean, with a nice park and a phenomenally ugly department store.

As a child, I liked Castellón, the last place where we stopped to get gas before reaching our village. I’m here because I want to know why Castellón built an airport from which no aircraft has ever taken off, an airport that cost €150 million in a city that’s only 65 kilometers from Valencia, which already has an airport that’s much too big for the region.

I leave the Autopista del Mediterráneo and drive along the CV-10 toward the Castellón airport. The CV-10 is the best highway I’ve ever driven on. The asphalt is perfect, the signs are new, and there is grass in the median. After about half an hour, I’m standing in front of a fence arguing with a security guard. The man reaches for his radio and says: “Serra 1 to Serra 2, we have a code 3!”

You can trigger a code 3 by asking a guard at the fence whether you can take a look at the airport from up close, an airport that was built with taxpayer money and was officially opened on March 25, 2011.

I get out of the car. Behind me is a large sculpture standing at the access road to the airport. A good friend of a local politician is still working on the piece, which is unbelievably ugly and reportedly cost €300,000. The guard talks into his radio. From where I’m standing, I can see the tower, some of the 3,000 parking spaces and a portion of the 2,700-meter (8,856-foot) runway.

“I gave your license plate number to the police,” says the guard. I nod and think to myself that the Castellón airport isn’t even the most pointless — and certainly not the most costly — airport in Spain. An airport was built in Ciudad Real, 160 kilometers from Madrid, at a cost of €1 billion. It now serves small private aircraft.

For years, Castellón suffered from the fact that it wasn’t as important, rich or well-known as Valencia and Alicante, the other two major cities in the region. Someone hit upon the idea of changing that by building 17 golf courses. Seventeen 18-hole golf courses translate into a lot of golfers, hence the airport. The golf courses never materialized.

The city behaved like a microcosm of Spain as a whole. Spain didn’t want to be Europe’s little brother. It wanted real airports and real highways. The days were gone when people like my father would arrive at a German train station in jackets too thin for the climate. The new Spain could play football, and it had companies like global telecommunications giant Telefónica and world-famous chefs like Ferran Adrià.

I leave the guard standing where he is and return to the highway. I’ll be in my parents’ village in three hours. A small detour takes me past a large construction site on which the Spanish railroad system is building another high-speed line. The country has more high-speed rail lines than Germany or France.

I ask myself what it must have been like to be a politician in the boom years, a period of senseless intoxication and time without measure. To be re-elected, many politicians had to have something to show for themselves, a project, and preferably one built of stone and concrete. Playing fields, theaters, swimming pools and streetcars were popping up everywhere. The economy had gone mad, and so had politicians. But the democracy was fully functional. Spaniards could have asked where all the money was coming from, and why roads were improving and trains were getting faster, while their children were doing worse in school. They could have elected different politicians, more level-headed ones. I firmly believe that every village, every town and every province got exactly the politician it deserved.

This extract is taken from an article “A Visit To Absurdistan: What Happened to the Spain Where I Was Born?” by Juan Moreno published in Der Speigel. The full article can be seen here:-

http://www.spiegel.de/international/europe/return-to-absurdistan-a-spiegel-reporter-visits-crisis-plagued-spain-a-847513-2.html

The new headache of informing the taxman about assets held abroad

Spanish residents have until the end of this month to declare holdings

If you have a bank account, property, shares or bonds abroad worth more than 50,000 euros for each category of asset, then you have only about a week left to declare these assets to the taxman. Failure to do so on time could mean facing a hefty fine.

The Finance Ministry approved the latest obligation on individuals and companies in fall of last year, as part of its drive against tax fraud. The period in which such assets can be declared began at the start of February and ends on April 30.

The Tax Agency hasn’t exactly made things easy: the form on which the assets have to be detailed is not without its complications and can only be sent via the internet. Below are some of the most common doubts raised with respect to this new obligation on taxpayers.

Who has to declare? Individuals or companies that pay personal income or corporate tax with assets and rights overseas valued at over 50,000 euros. The rule applies both to Spaniards and foreigners resident in Spain. The rule does not apply to retirees from other countries who spend periods of the year in Spain.

What assets have to be declared? The Tax Agency identifies three classes of assets: accounts in overseas banks, securities and shares, or other forms of participation in foreign companies, as well as real estate and any rights to the use of real estate.

Beyond what limit must a declaration be made? This is one of the areas that has raised most doubts. No declaration is necessary for each of the three classes if the sum involved for each is under 50,000 euros. For example, a taxpayer with 30,000 euros deposited in a bank account in Germany, a garage in Andorra valued at 45,000 euros and shares in a Swiss company worth 40,000 euros is not obliged to make a declaration. Taxpayers are obliged to declare assets in one of the three classes if the value of those assets is over 50,000 euros, but not in the other two classes if the value is below 50,000 euros.

How do you present the declaration? Through form 720. It can only be sent via the internet, which means that the declarer must have an electronic signature. A number of tax specialists have complained about the complexity of the process.

How are the assets to be valued? In the case of bank accounts, the value is that as of December 21, 2012 and the average balance in the account in the last quarter of the year. As regards assets such as shares, the value is that of the market price at the end of the year. In the case of property, the value is that of the acquisition price at the official exchange rate at the end of the year.

What happens if you don’t declare? Fines amount to 5,000 euros for every detail on the assets omitted. Sanctions may be up to 150 percent of the value of the asset in question.

via http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/04/22/inenglish/1366654455_160057.html

Valencia politicians shocked to hear engine roar at empty Castellón airport

Probe planned to find out how local racing driver gained permission to practice at phantom facility

“We’d gone there to denounce the fact that, two years after its inauguration, it still hasn’t opened,” said Valencia regional deputy María José Salvador after a visit to Castellón airport. “When we got there we heard a noise like a Formula 1 car and we saw a vehicle doing laps of the runway.”

One of the cars in practice at Castellon Airport

One of the cars in practice at Castellon Airport

Upon quizzing the security guard, the delegation of politicians, which included the deputy speaker of the Valencia assembly, Ángel Luna, and the mayor of nearby Vila-real, José Benlloch, were directed to the public company that runs the airport, Aerocas. Its president, Carlos Fabra, is a former Castellón provincial leader and the driving force behind the facility, which has yet to see a single plane arrive or leave.

One of the delegation, Eva Martínez, called Aerocas and was told that the car had permission to be there by an administrator who did not confirm the name of its driver. Her question was answered when a group of children arrived to catch a glimpse of Roberto Merhi, a Formula 3 champion and local resident, who now competes for Mercedes in the DTM championship.

Merhi visited Fabra in 2010 and presented him with a model of his car, which bore sponsorship from the local tourism department. Despite Martínez’s failure to raise an Aerocas manager on the phone, she held little doubt as to who had authorized the session: “I’m sure it’s the person who thinks the airport is his.”

The delegation said that their planned complaint will not be to do with the driver’s training but the lack of transparency over activities at the phantom airport, which was opened in 2011 by Fabra and former premier Francisco Camps, who resigned that year to stand trial in the Gürtel corruption case.

via http://elpais.com/elpais/2013/01/22/inenglish/1358854320_929967.html

Spanish festival Benicassim has future secured in deal

Organisers of Spain’s Benicassim say the festival’s future has been secured after it was bought back by its previous owners.

Promoter Vince Power has struck a deal with administrators to rebuy the event.

It was under the control of administrators after Power’s company Music Festivals PLC went under in September.

Power said he was “delighted” by the agreement.

This summer’s Benicassim saw performances from The Stone Roses, Ed Sheeran and David Guetta.

In the past thousands of British music fans have made the journey to the festival which takes place in the town of Benicassim, near Valencia.

via BBC – Newsbeat – Spanish festival Benicassim has future secured in deal.

Ryanair: Low cost, low safety?

  • The government has accused the Irish airline of breaching regulations
  • But CEO Michael O’Leary says the company is the victim of a smear campaign

ÁLVARO DE CÓZAR 19 SEP 2012 – 13:31 CET
The Spanish government has ratcheted up its long-running row with Ryanair over alleged repeated safety breaches by the Irish low-cost airline. Public Works Minister Ana Pastor said last week she would be meeting Irish government officials at the headquarters of the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) to discuss changes to EU legislation that would allow Spain to fine the airline itself, rather than pursuing complaints through the Irish authorities.

Ryanair CEO Michael O’Leary, during a press conference held in Madrid last month. / DANI POZO (AFP)

When speaking to the media, Pastor has avoided mentioning Ryanair by name, instead saying: “Low-cost, low-price airlines are a good thing, but we cannot have low safety.” She cited incidents ranging from the loss of cabin pressure (which occurred on a flight from Madrid to Gran Canaria earlier this month) to problems such as the identification of flights.
Her ministry is also investigating three emergency landings involving Ryanair planes in Valencia at the end of July, due to the flights running low on fuel.
Pastor, who has already talked to the Irish authorities, said she wants Spain – and any other EU member state – to have the power to withdraw an airline’s license. Currently it is just the company’s home country that can do that. But that would be, she added, an “extreme” measure, when “serious sanctions are continuously being levied.”
The minister has also been working with the International
Civil Aviation Organization and the European Commission to change the type and amount of sanctions, which will result in a toughening up of fines for companies that don’t comply with regulations.
Ryanair calls itself the world’s most successful airline, while many former passengers insist it is the world’s most hated. Within the industry, its profitability is envied, and flag carriers such as Iberia have copied aspects of its nofrills approach in an effort to cut operating costs. But is its reputation for safety breaches justified, or, as Ryanair boss Michael O’Leary claims, is Ana Pastor merely trying to protect Iberia’s market share by squeezing the competition out of the market?
Ryanair landed in Spain in 2004, and its business model proved an immediate success with short-haul passengers who are not interested in business class, a free meal or a complimentary newspaper. It has reduced turnarounds to 25 minutes, sells its tickets via the internet, and outsources pilots, who are paid by the flight. O’Leary made no bones that his objective was to have as many planes as possible in the air at any given time, and to offer
passengers the cheapest prices in the market.
Eight years on, Ryanair now carries more passengers than Iberia, making it Spain’s leading airline. Between January and August it flew 24.7 million people, giving it a market share of 20.4 percent. In a distant second place comes Vueling, with 14.1 million passengers; while Iberia trails in third place with 13.9 million.
The competition says that Ryanair owes its success to taking risks that other airlines do not. Among these is its policy of saving fuel. Ryanair pilots’ instructions are clear on this. In an internal memo dated February 1, 2010, the company reminded its pilots that the minimum legal amount of fuel as specified in each flight plan is sufficient and that they do not need to follow the practice of other
companies in requesting extra fuel during turnarounds to
cover any delays that might be caused by weather conditions or other problems during a flight. Ryanair pilots are allowed to take on just 15 minutes worth of extra fuel. The theory behind the practice is to keep the weight of the aircraft down, which burns less fuel. But the company now wants pilots to reduce that amount yet
further, which it says is costing Ryanair around five million dollars a year. Pilots who do not follow the policy must “explain their actions face to face,” the memo concludes.
“The pilots are under pressure, and this is clearly compromising safety,” says José María Íscar, the Secretary of SEPLA, the Spanish pilots’ union. “The pilot is responsible for safety and should take the necessary decision without having to think about the possible impact on his or her job.”
“No Ryanair pilot has ever been sanctioned or criticized
for taking on more fuel than the legal minimum,” counters
O’Leary in a telephone interview with EL PAÍS. “Our policy in recent years has been that the pilot should decide how much fuel is needed for a flight,” he adds.
Ryanair’s efforts to save fuel are at the center of the latest flare up with the Spanish government. On July 26, between 4pm and 11pm, the weather forecast for Barajas airport was for thunderstorms with heavy rain, along with strong winds. At 9pm the airport closed for 90 minutes. According to those working in the control tower and on the ground that day, the situation was chaotic, with heavy
traffic, and as a result some flights were redirected to Valencia airport. Air traffic controllers there suddenly found themselves having to deal with three Ryanair planes announcing Mayday calls for lack of fuel. A Lan Chile flight also had engine problems – all in the space of 15 minutes.
“I don’t want to think what that must have been like,” says David Guillamón, the press officer for USCA, the labor union that represents air traffic controllers. “A Mayday warning is not something that happens very often, contrary to what Ryanair would have us believe. Without a doubt it is one of the most difficult situations that pilots and air traffic controllers ever have to deal with. What happened in Valencia was potentially very dangerous.”
AENA, the Spanish airports authority, must take its share
of the blame for what happened that day. The morning shift at Barajas knew what was coming later, and had issued warnings that the airport would most likely be able to handle just 40 percent of traffic coming in as a result of the bad weather. In response, AENA should have warned Eurocontrol, the EU’s flight control body, which in turn would have rescheduled flights heading into Barajas. By the time that AENA took action, it was 10.10pm, the airport was closed, and air traffic controllers were struggling to deal with incoming flights.
AENA subsequently issued a press statement saying: “On July 26, the usual measures were taken to deal with storms as laid out in the regulations, thereby reducing the airport’s capacity. Nevertheless, that day there were added exceptional circumstances given the magnitude of the storm, which led to some planes being redirected.”
AESA, the Spanish Air Safety Agency, has also come under fire. Pilots and air traffic controllers accuse the organization of a lack of transparency for failing to publish its findings over the events of July 26. In the United States or the United Kingdom, information about such incidents is made available on the websites of the bodies responsible for air safety. Spain, despite having recently passed legislation supposedly requiring greater transparency by government agencies, is still reluctant to release information, which in this case could help prevent accidents.
Regarding allegations in the Spanish media that Ryanair planes were involved in 1,200 safety breaches in the first quarter of this year, Michael O’Leary told EL PAÍS that the accusations are false, and have been leaked by the Public Works Ministry.
In turn, the Public Works Ministry denies that AESA leaked any information to the media, and agreed that the figure of 1,200 safety breaches was incorrect. EL PAÍS asked the Public Works Ministry for its figures regarding safety breaches by Ryanair and other airlines of a similar size, and was told: “The information is confidential.”
O’Leary says that Ryanair’s safety record matches that of other airlines. “The Public Works Ministry is lying. We have been flying for 20 years and have not been involved in a single accident; the number of safety incidents involving Ryanair planes is no greater than that of other companies. What sort of ministry spends its time running a smear campaign against a company that is growing, and is creating jobs in the process?”
AENA and AESA have also been criticized by ICAO, notably over their handling of the investigation into a Spanair plane that crashed at Barajas Airport in 2008, killing 154 passengers and crew. In 2010, ICAO published a report slamming the investigation, saying that it found some 40 problems related to Spain’s air traffic control system. “Some reports of incidents in Spain do not reach the ICAO, and are not passed on systematically.” It also questioned whether the investigators looking into the causes of the accident were sufficiently qualified, and that the government was not bound by the outcome of the report. The Socialist Party government of the time accepted most of the findings. But earlier this summer, the
Public Works Ministry insisted that most of the problems had been corrected and that the ICAO had approved an action plan to address those still remaining.
Luis Lacasa, the head of COPAC, the Spanish College of Pilots, says that Ana Pastor is going to take personal charge of addressing safety issues in the Spanish airline industry. “We think this is a good thing, and hope to see action taken soon, and that this will mean real changes being implemented, unlike on previous occasions,” he explains. “We have proposed setting up a multidisciplinary working group to look at what happened in
Valencia, and if mistakes have been made, to take the necessary measures to make sure that they do not happen again.”
An airline is an expensive business to run, and delays can increase costs substantially, with the final responsibility for deciding when and if a plane should take off falling on the shoulders of pilots and air traffic controllers. In recent years the airline business has been subject to intense competition, particularly since Ryanair changed the rules of the game.
“Twenty years ago the costs of running an airline were astronomical,” says a senior executive at one of Ryanair’s competitors. “The business model created by Southwest Airlines in the United States in the 1980s, and then further developed by Ryanair, has changed everything. Shorter turnarounds mean savings of up to four million euros a year. Everything has been cut back to the legal minimum and this has changed the aviation industry, but flying still remains safe,” he adds.
So is Ryanair safe? There is no evidence to suggest that the company is breaking the rules, although many experts say that it is often very close to doing so. In which case, why is Spain now so set against Ryanair? For years regional governments have paid the company huge subsidies, as they saw the company as a way of bringing in more tourists.
Industry sources say that Ryanair’s competitors, who are now following the company’s lead, are engaged in a life and death struggle. For its part, Ryanair projects itself as a company that is not only making it cheaper for people to travel, but is also creating much-needed jobs in Spain.
In July, in response to the government’s plan to double airport taxes, Ryanair said it would be cutting routes and reducing the number of flights to Spain.
“Ryanair objects to the Spanish government’s decision to double airport taxes at both Madrid and Barcelona airports,” O’Leary said. “Sadly, this will lead to severe traffic, tourism and job cuts at both airports this winter.
“Ryanair’s cuts alone will cause a combined loss of 2.3m
passengers and more than 2,000 jobs at Madrid and Barcelona airports,” he added. “These will go to other, lower-cost airports elsewhere in Europe, where Ryanair continues to grow.”
In its mounting war of words with Ryanair, the Spanish
government knows that it will find a sympathetic ear among disgruntled passengers whose stories of being overcharged for baggage, getting stung for not having a ready-printed boarding pass, finding bugs on planes, suffering delays and cancellations, and not being able to take small children aboard without passports regularly make the headlines.
Consumer rights groups say that they have received thousands of complaints from Spanish air travelers about Ryanair. Take Jorge Cívico, for example, who was prevented from boarding a flight from Seville to Palma de Mallorca last summer because his four-year-old son did not have an identity card. “They told me it was the law in Ireland,” Cívico told the media. In which case, why did he
travel with a company that is sometimes so problematic? “Because the company is cheaper than any other, that’s why,” came the answer.
In the end, that is the secret of Ryanair’s success, as Michael O’Leary points out: “Have we lost any money since we started operating? No. the fact is that we have sold more tickets than anybody else.”

via http://elpais.com/elpais/2012/09/19/inenglish/1348052641_256460.html