The Gazette Lanzarote Jan 2014 | Page 18

Looking Forward 2015 2015 dawns with lots of promise in terms of tourism, Lanzarote’s lifeblood, but the broader European picture is not as optimistic. It’s going to be a year of elections, of special events and of renewal. T Paulino Rivero will leave the Canarian Presidency in May he People Speak 2015 will be the year when the Canarian Government will find itself with a new President, and new leaders could also take up the reins in Spain, the United Kingdom and at your local town hall. None of the elections that are scheduled for 2015 are certainties. On Lanzarote, local Canarian nationalist parties will be hoping to profit from anger over the oil issues, while Socialists will be keeping their fingers crossed that the two-party system is strong enough to send their end of the see-saw upwards again. But there are still so many unknown elements that only a fool would make a firm forecast. In the UK General Election, the influence of UKIP could have a serious effect on policy, if not at the polls. Current UK hostility towards EU immigration could herald measures that may not mean good news for over a million British citizens in Spain who are EU immigrants themselves. Finally, the year will end with a Spanish General Election, in which the major parties could receive a historic bloody nose from smaller parties outside of the rigid Spanish establishment. O Ironman Returns in May port Outlook S Sports fans can look forward to the Cricket World Cup in Australasia in February, while rugby´s coming home to England for it´s own World Cup in September and football fans on Lanzarote will have plenty of opportunity to enjoy the Copa America in the summer. On the island, there´ll be another Ironman and Ironman 70.3 races, as well of dozens of other athletic competitions that are rapidly becoming institutions on this sporty island. 18 | January 2015 | The Gazette il Outlook Lanzarote´s newest tourist attraction is an oil platform that is quite visible on the horizon from most raised parts of the island. There will be no referendum of the Canarian people, and it looks likely that none of the calls to abandon drilling will be heeded. Nevertheless, the chances of viable oil supplies being found are less than one in five. And with oil The Rowan Renaissance cheaper than it is currently drilling off has been in Canarian shores years, perhaps the best result for Lanzarote anti-oil campaigners would be if the project were abandoned for financial reasons. Nevertheless, even if Repsol does pack up and leave empty handed, it will leave behind islands that are now politically polarized and embittered as never before. It is highly likely that Spain´s ruling PP party and its industry Minister José Manuel Soria - one of whose first acts was to approve the drilling - will reap the results of Madrid´s high-handedness in this year’s elections. One thing is for sure: while oil prices fall globally the cost to the Canaries has been much higher.