Portugal Newswatch
Reflections on current affairs in Portugal by journalist and author Len Port.
Thursday, April 3, 2025
TRUMP'S TARIFFS "NOT LOGICAL."
Thursday, March 27, 2025
SPRING HAS SPRUNG AT LAST!
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The weather keeps us wondering: what’s coming next?
The first three weeks of this month made it the
wettest March on record in the Algarve. Then, as it so often does, the weather
changed dramatically, bringing beautiful blue skies and sunshine in recent
days.
March’s heavy rainfall significantly raised water
levels in the Algarve’s reservoirs, though not as dramatically as elsewhere in
Portugal, where some reservoirs reportedly reached 80% capacity, with some even
overflowing.
Amid the downpours, Storm Marinho swept in from the
Azores Archipelago, bringing winds of up to 159 kilometres per hour (nearly 100
miles per hour). Some large trees and unstable structures were brought down,
but according to the National Civil Protection Agency, there was no substantial
damage to buildings.
It was only in January last year that the Algarve
faced one its most severe droughts in recent years. The government declared a
state of alert and adopted a series of measures to curb both farming and
domestic water consumption. Extreme or severe droughts occur in Portugal every
decade or less.
Spring (Primavera in Portuguese)
officially starts on 21 March. So, what will the weather be like this year
until the arrival of summer on 21 June? In Portugal, the average temperature
ranges from 11 C (52F) to 22C (72F) at this time of the year. Spring in
the Algarve is comfortably warm and bright, with just occasional showers in
April and May.
Summer, on the other hand, is a different story.
While visitors from the north usually welcome June's warmth, July and August
have been sizzling hot in recent years – likely a consequence of the Global
Warming crisis. There is little reason to expect that this summer will be any
different, with temperatures once again expected to soar well into the 30sC
(high 80sF). By then, cool rain will be a distant memory.
Written by Len Port,
Edited by Catriona Anderson.
Thursday, March 20, 2025
MAIN HEADLINE NEWS
ELECTION IN MAY
Parliament has been dissolved ahead of a national election set for 18 May – the third in as many years – following a no-confidence vote against the minority Social Democratic Party (PSD). The main contenders in May will be the PSD, the Socialist Party (PS) and Chega.
WEATHER WARNINGS
The Portuguese Sea and Atmosphere Institute has issued multiple weather warnings for various parts of the mainland, as well as the Azores and Madeira archipelagos. Flights have been disrupted, flooding has occurred, and some reservoirs have overflowed. The Algarve, after years of drought, has experienced relentless rain day after day after day this month.
AIRPORT ARRIVALS.
Portugal’s airports handled 4.2 million passengers in January, 6% more than the same month last year. This surge is all the more remarkable, given that January falls in the middle of the tourism low-season.
UKRAINE SUPPORT
Portugal's prime minister and foreign minister have been in close collaboration with British and EU efforts to secure a lasting peace agreement between Ukraine and Russia.
HOME PRICES
The price of homes is expected to continue to rise this year in Portugal, one of Europe’s hottest property markets. This is driven by strong foreign demand and limited supply.
HOMELESSNESS
A Catholic Charity is taking action to tackle what it describes as “a dramatic increase” in homelessness. The organisation has stressed the urgent need “to fight against poverty and exclusion in Portugal.” New homes rose by 7.5% in 2924 over the previous tear. The rise in existing homes over the same period was 9.7%.
TRUMP’S TARRIFS
Wine producers in the Douro, Portugal’s prime wine-producing region are deeply concerned that Trump’s proposed 20% tariffs on drinks, including wine, from the European Union. Industry experts warn the measures could have a “brutal effect” on their exports.
HUNTERS HUNTED
Between 18 August and 28 February, the GNR police inspected 7,496 individuals, detaining 197 for illegally hunting protected species.
ANIMAL ABUSE..
The PSP police have detained 326 people for environmental crimes, including animal abuse and have recorded 11,485 offences related to those crimes over the past three years.
Thursday, March 13, 2025
YET ANOTHER GENERAL ELECTION
The third snap election in as many years is to take place in May, triggered this time by a controversy involving Prime Minister Luis Montenegro.
As leader of his minority government and the
centre-right Social Democratic Party (PSD), Montenegro had worked quite well in
coalition with the centre-left Socialist Party (PS). However, this fragile
partnership collapsed when the PS rejected a confidence vote called by the
prime minister, who faces allegations of a conflict of interests relating to a
family-owned business.
A last-minute effort to avoid the confidence vote
fell apart when the parties failed to agree on the terms for establishing a
parliamentary inquiry into the allegations.
Montenegro, 52, took office last April, but his
government came crashing down on Tuesday evening when the confidence vote
failed. The PS backed by the right-wing Chega party, voted against him, leaving
President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa to set yet another election vote.
The prime minister has said that when he became
leader of the PSD in 2022, he transferred control of a law firm he had created
to his wife and children. Mr. Montenegro has insisted he has committed no crime
and done no wrong.
Last year’s snap election followed the resignation of the PS Prime Minister Antonio Costa amid a corruption scandal within his party. He denied any wrong-going himself and went on to become president of the European Council, a position he still holds.
Friday, March 7, 2025
EU LEADERS STAND FIRM AGAINST TRUMP
Portuguese Prime Minister Luis
Montenegro (pictured) was in Brussels for Thursday’s emergency summit to thrash out
defence plans for Ukraine and the entire continent in the face of Russian
aggression and the lack of solidarity from the Trump administration.
Leaders from 26 of the 27
European nations attending the summit reached a commitment to work closely
together to bolster support for Ukraine and increase the continent's security.
Predictably, the only exception was Hungary’s Victor Orbán.
Mr Montenegro made it clear that the summit was of great importance. Speaking to reporters on the sideline of the meeting, Mr Montenegro said: “Our expectation is that we can take very big steps towards the EU’s participation in a peace process that everyone wants for Ukraine.”
He noted that the EU will provide €150 billion in loans to
member nations, but would not be drawn on the possibility of a snap election quite
soon in Portugal
As a loyal
supporter of the European Union for decades, and a founding member of NATO in
1949, Portugal, like nearly all other EU and BATO member states, is deeply
concerned about President Trump’s increasingly erratic and unpredictable decisions.
Portugal’s stance in the current
defence crisis is neither erratic nor unpredictable— nor is that of Europe’s
most influential leader, President Emmanuel Macron, who recently met with Mr Montenegro
during the French president’s state visit to Lisbon. Their position is
unambiguous: they will continue to back Ukraine against Russian aggression and fully
support the EU and NATO, with or without United States backing.
Prime Minister Montenegro and
the other European leaders are trying to work out the problem of money: how to
dramatically raise funds to meet the need for far greater defence spending.
As part of the latest
discussions in Brussels, the European Commission has proposed invoking an
emergency provision that would allow Portugal and all other EU nations to significantly
exceed hitherto defence spending limits. The plan includes loans guaranteed by
the EU budget.
Friday, February 28, 2025
FRENCH PRESIDENT’S STATE VISIT
During a two-day state visit to Portugal, President Emmanuel Macron of France sought to boost bilateral ties between France and Portugal, while also advocating for greater European unity in the face of growing threats and uncertainties.
President Macron and his wife, Brigitte, were warmly welcomed in Lisbon on Thursday by Portugal’s President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa and Prime Minister Luis Montenegro.
The visit came just days after Macron met with U.S President Donald Trump in Washington, where he tried to persuade Trump of the importance of continuing the long-standing transatlantic relationship, which now seems to be crumbling.
Soon after his arrival, Macron stressed the need to support Ukraine, especially at a time when the Trump administration is befriending Russia’s Vladimir Putin while Ukraine’s fate remains desperately uncertain. Macron and other European leaders have been calling for greater cooperation in response to the deepening concerns triggered by Trump’s perplexing turn-arounds.
A considerable majority of people in France (66%) believe that the European Union should continue supporting Ukraine financially and militarily, even without US backing. However, a greater majority of French people (78%) oppose deploying French troops on the ground in Ukraine.
Macron expressed hope that the meeting between Trump and Ukraine’s President Zelenskyy this Friday would go well. “I’ll always try to be there to make things easier, but Ukraine is an important fight for us,” said Macron in Lisbon.
He added: “It’s important that Zelensky should be able to explain to President Trump what is at stake in his country, as I tried to explain last Monday how important it is for us, and also to remind him of the importance the transatlantic link can have.”
Unfortunately the Ukrainian leader’s meeting in Washington could hardly have been worse. During an angry quarrel in the Oval Office, Trump cancelled the meeting and ordered Zelensky out.
On Friday President Macron and his wife travelled to Porto in northern Portugal, where they signed agreements related to political, security, and economic issues.
Written by Len Port,
Edited by Catriona Anderson.
PLASTICS BUBBLE BARRIER
A remarkably innovative way to help prevent plastic waste from contaminating the oceans has been devised in Portugal.
Portugal has long been at the forefront of combating plastic pollution. Specialist researchers warn that every minute of every day, the equivalent of one garbage truckload of plastic waste enters our oceans. In Europe alone, an estimated 825 million pieces of plastic end up in the sea yearly. Experts caution that by 2040, this figure could reach a staggering 37 million tonnes annually. This includes huge quantities of microplastics, which are killing hundreds of marine species and severely endangering human health by infiltrating our food chain. This is not alarmist speculation—it is a reality that demands urgent action.
The coastal town of Vila do Conde in northern Portugal has joined forces with scientists to create a ‘bubble barrier’ in the Ave River. This relatively simple yet highly effective system uses a curtain of air bubbles to trap plastic waste in a container before it can reach the Atlantic. Plastics – even microplastics - can then be eliminated. So far, the ‘bubble barrier’ has successfully intercepted 86% of the plastics in the river.
Further high-tech methods may help address this growing crisis, but municipalities, businesses, and individuals also need to play their part by actively collecting and reducing plastic waste – both near the water and elsewhere.