National Parks Autonomous Agency
The National Parks Autonomous Agency is an agency of the Spanish central government that manages the National Parks Network and the Spanish Biosphere Reserves Network, as well as mountains, farms and other patrimonial assets of its property. The agency was created on June 23, 1995 by the Agriculture Minister Luis María Atienza by merging two other agencies, the Institute for the Conservation of Nature and the National Institute for Agrarian Reform and Development.
The OAPN is an agency of the Spanish Ecological Transition Department. The Minister and the Secretary of State for Environment act as President and Vice President of the agency, respectively although the chief executive of the agency is the Director. The current director is Juan José Areces Maqueda, appointed on July 29, 2018.
Powers
The National Parks Autonomous Agency is responsible for:- The formulation of the national policy regarding national parks.
- The dissemination and promotion of the image, values, and conservation model of national parks abroad.
- The planning and management of the natural spaces of state competence.
- The management of the mountains, farms and other assets assigned or their ownership.
- The coordination and promotion of the Man and the Biosphere Programme of UNESCO, as well as the promotion, coordination and support of the Biosphere Reserve Network.
- The support to the Ecological Transition Department's policies regarding biodiversity, conservation and sustainable use of natural resources, conservation of fauna, flora, habitat and natural ecosystems in the terrestrial and marine environment. In this sense, it has the same responsibilities in the Department's policies on education, information, awareness, training and public participation on environmental issues through the National Center for Environmental Education.
- The provision to the public of information and documentation services specialized in protected areas, nature conservation, dissemination, communication and environmental education.
- The cooperation with public and private entities, both national and international, for the development of the previous functions.
History
From 1918 to 1954, the National Parks Network was integrated by those two parks. In 1954, two places of the Canary Islands were granted with the rank of national parks, the Teide National Park and the Caldera de Taburiente National Park. A year later, the Aiguas Tortas y Lago de San Mauricio National Park was created.
In 1957, a new Forestry Act was passed and it replaced the old Forestry Act of 1863 and also the National Parks Act of 1916. This new legislation also marks a substantial change in the legislative approach to environmental protection, according to which ecological factors begin to be more important when declaring new parks; in front of the merely historical and landscape. Years later, in 1969, Doñana is declared a National Park and, in 1973, the Tablas of Daimiel. A year later, a new national park is created in the Canary Islands, the Timanfaya National Park.
Other important year for the protection of the Spanish parks is 1975. The Protected Natural Spaces Act is passed which creates three new classifications of protected spaces —Integral Reserves of Scientific Interest, Natural Parks and Natural Parks of National Interest—, in addition to national parks. This law also brings with it the reclassification of several parks, with the notorious expansion of Doñana and Ordesa y Monte Perdido. In the beginning of the 80s, the Garajonay National Park is created, one of the best world representations of the laurel, relict vegetation of the Tertiary Era.
The Natural Spaces and Wild Flora and Fauna Conservation Act of 1989 gave a decisive push to the National Parks Network. This law officially creates the Network and it contained a clause where it is detailed which parks are part of it and their ecosystems. Finally, the law also assumes the right of every person to environment. Following the principles established by this law, in 1991 the Cabrera Archipelago Maritime-Terrestrial National Park is created and in 1995 the Covadonga National Park is extended integrating all the limestone landscape, creating the Picos de Europa National Park. Months later, the Cabañeros National Park is created and integrated into the Network.
During the following years after the approval of this law, there was discomfort among the regions because the law gave the exclusive power to the central government to manage the National Parks. Several regions —Andalusia, Aragón, Balearic Islands, Basque Country, Canary Islands, Cantabria, Castile and León and Catalonia— presented unconstitutionality appeals before the Constitutional Court against the law and other related regulations for this reason. In 1995, the Constitutional Court declared unconstitutional the fifth additional provision of the law and in 1997 the Spanish Parliament reformed the 1989 Act to establish a shared system of managing between the central government and the regions. On June 23, 1995, because of the devolution of powers to the regions, the Minister of Agriculture Luis María Atienza approved a royal decree merging two other agencies, the Institute for the Conservation of Nature and the National Institute for Agrarian Reform and Development to create the current OAPN.
In 1999 a new national park was created, this time the Sierra Nevada National Park, and in 2002 the Atlantic Islands of Galicia National Park.
Another appeal of unconstitutionality is filed by the regions of Andalusia and Aragón against the 1998 Act. These two regions criticized the shared system. The Constitutional Court was forced to interpret the law and it established in 2004 that the shared system consisted on a day-to-day management by the regions but this management must to be finance by the regional governments, and the superior supervision and coordination of the Network was granted to the central government by giving to it the authority to create or extend national parks and to establish the general guidelines of action.
In March 2007 the Monfragüe National Park was created and, a month later, the National Parks Network Act was passed. The National Parks Network Act of 2007 assumed the interpretation of the Constitutional Court and it granted the supervisory power to the Department of Environment, through its Autonomous Agency. The last national park to be created was the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park on June 25, 2013.
On December 3, 2014 it was approved the current National Parks Act. This law reinforces, for its singularity, the protection of those parks and it establish an improved coordination and support system with the central government. In this sense, the law established an emergency system against environmental disasters and it forbids activities such us sport and recreational fishing, sport and commercial hunting, logging for commercial purposes, as well as urbanization and building.
Directors
National Parks Network
The National Parks Network is a system established to protect and manage some Spanish Natural Heritage with the category of national park. The RPN is integrated by 15 national parks and all the staff and administrations that are part of it. The network encompasses approximately 1 million acres. The largest national park is the Sierra Nevada National Park with 212,222 acres and it is surrounded by the Sierra Nevada Natural Park, that is approx. 200,000 acres. The smallest park is the Tablas de Daimiel National Park at 7,487 acres.In addition to the national parks, that are directly managed by the Spanish regional administrations, the National Parks Autonomous Agency administers other properties. The OAPN administers 18 properties that encompasses 247,105.40 acres. All these properties have in common the fact of being representative of some of the most emblematic landscapes and Iberian ecosystems. Most of these properties are owned by a public entity, although some of them are private.
Visitors
The National Parks Network reached the number of 10 million visitors in 2000 and 15 million in 2016. Currently, the Network receives over 15.5 million visits each year throughout the 15 parks. The most visited national park is the Teide National Park with 4.3 million visitors in 2017, followed by the Sierra de Guadarrama National Park with 2.6 million, the Picos de Europa National Park with 2 million and the Timanfaya with around 1.7 million. The less visited national parks are the Cabañeros National Park, the Cabrera Archipelago Maritime-Terrestrial National Park and the Tablas de Daimiel National Park, all of them with an average of 110,000 to 170,000 visitors.Infrastructure and others
The national parks have, in general, all the necessary and sufficient provision of means for their proper functioning and development. In addition to the equipment and infrastructures for public use, all the national parks of the National Parks Network have at least one administrative office and a basic resource for their maintenance, surveillance and own monitoring.The data about the material resources are very scarce and outdated, since the last official report dates from 2013. As of 2013, the 15 national parks had 32 visitors centers, 58 information centers, 121 parkings, 157 lookouts and 67 entertainment areas. Also, the vehicles fleet of the Network was 392 in 2013.
Staff
Between 1918 and 1997, the staff in charge of the national parks was part of the General State Administration. The Constitution of 1978 established a decentralized system and in 1997 most of the regions assumed the managements of the active national parks whitin its territories. As of 2015, the National Parks Network staff was integrated by 1,908 people. From those, 502 were firefighters and 426 surveillance and security.International affairs
World Heritage Sites
s have enough universally recognized natural and cultural features that they are considered to merit the protection of all the peoples in the world. Spain is currently the third country with more World Heritage Sites, and the OAPN administers four of them:- Garajonay National Park, Canary Islands.
- Doñana National Park, Andalusia.
- Pyrénées – Mont Perdu World Heritage Site, Aragón
- Teide National Park, Canary Islands.
UNESCO Biosphere Reserves