Faults identified during the eruption continue to 'creep' - New eruption forecasting methods from La Palma highlighted by UNDRR - Students participate in water quality measurements - More than 1,100 families now returned to Puerto Naos and La Bombilla - Aid for second homes starting to be delivered - €400,000 for home construction in Los Llanos - Demands for aid from the 'Volcano Law' - Ongoing aid for affected businesses - LP-2 reconstruction commences with challenges and expropriations - La Laguna School reconstruction awaiting contract award - Plans to reconstruct the La Laguna football field - GeoTenerife presents at VMSG 2026 conference

National Volcanology Centre Headquarters will be in La Palma - Gas extraction pipe installed in Puerto Naos - €1.2 billion spent by Spain on reconstruction - €100 million aid for lost farms - Income tax reduction extended until 2027 - LP-2 road reconstruction begins after delays - Protests from residents in the 'red zone' - New building acquired for housing for those who lost their homes - Access tracks created to more isolated neighbourhoods - Repair works for water infrastructure finished

GeoTenerife presents latest projects on La Palma - New 'disaster learning community' established on La Palma - International Tajogaite Eruption Conference brings volcanologists to La Palma - New biodiversity recovery study by CSIC - ISvolcan health impact study continues - Aid for farmers agreed - 32% in squalor in La Palma were affected by the eruption - Access to 40 new plots of land

Canary Islands 'Volcano Law' published - Subsurface pressure tests in Puerto Naos - La Palma awarded for ISVOLCAN health project - Latest Reconstruction Statistics Published - Results from Radon exposure tests in Puerto Naos - Tajogaite Reconstruction Conference in November - LP-211 road reopens - Geothermal Energy Project Updates - Citizens Demand Public Hazard Map for La Palma - Calls to Extend 60% Income Tax Reductions - New Studies on Earthquakes Preceding the Eruption

Las Islas Canarias se promocionan como un paraíso de biodiversidad y turismo sostenible. Pero la historia del Puertito de Adeje SeaLab revela una realidad muy distinta: un patrón en el que las autoridades locales explotan las iniciativas de restauración ambiental para generar relaciones públicas, solo para eliminarlas cuando aparecen los intereses inmobiliarios.