Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica y el Reto Demográfico | |
The Ministry has its headquarters in the Nuevos Ministerios government complex. | |
Agency overview | |
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Formed | May 5, 1996 (as Ministry of Environment) June 7, 2018 (as Ministry for the Ecological Transition) |
Type | Ministry |
Jurisdiction | Spanish government |
Headquarters | Plaza de San Juan de la Cruz, s/n Madrid, Spain |
Employees | 6,129 (2019) [1] |
Annual budget | € 8.9 billion, 2023 [2] |
Minister responsible |
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Agency executives |
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Child agency | |
Website | Ministry for the Ecological Transition (in Spanish) |
The Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge (MITECO) is the department of the Government of Spain responsible for developing the government policy on fight against climate change, prevention of pollution, protecting the natural heritage, biodiversity, forests, sea, water and energy for a more ecological and productive social model. [3] Likewise, it is responsible for the elaboration and development of the government policy against the country's demographic challenges (population ageing, territorial depopulation, floating population effects, etc.). [3]
It corresponds to the MITECO the elaboration of the national legislation on waters and coasts, environment, climate change, meteorology and climatology; the direct management of the hydraulic public domain (all types of surface and groundwater), of the maritime-terrestrial public domain (territorial waters, inland waters, natural resources of the exclusive economic zone and the continental shelf, as well as beaches and coasts); the representation of the Kingdom in the international organizations corresponding to these matters; as well as the coordination of actions, cooperation and agreement in the design and application of all policies that affect the scope of competences of the regions and the other public administrations, encouraging their participation through the cooperation bodies and instruments adequate. [3]
Likewise, it corresponds to the Ministry the development of the national energy and mining policy, together with the measures aimed at ensuring the energy supply, guaranteeing a correct regulation of the sector and the analysis and monitoring of these markets, together with mining competencies, all within the framework of the ecological transition. [3]
The MITECO is headed by the Ecological Transition Minister, who is appointed by the Monarch at request of the Prime Minister. Other high officials of the ministry are the Secretary of State for Energy, the Secretary of State for Environment, the Secretary-General for the Demographic Challenge and the Under-Secretary of the Department. The current minister is Teresa Ribera since 2018. [4]
The history of environmental policy in Spain reaches back to the 18th century, when the Ordinances for Conservation and the Increase of the Marine Mountains and for the Increase and Conservation of Forests and Plantings were promulgated (1748). [5]
The Royal Decree of November 9, 1832, gave the newly created Ministry of Public Works jurisdiction over the planting and conservation of the mountains and trees, as well as the irrigation and drainage works of marshy lands. [6] A year later, the Directorate-General for Forests was created, the first administration dedicated to the conservation of nature. [7] By Royal Decree of 31 May 1837, it was established that the mounts and plantations which belonged the Crown and of unknown owner, as belonging to the Nation, they would be administered by the government. The government body entrusted with this task was the Directorate-General for Forests. In 1855 the Forestry Advisory Board was founded.
In the 20th century, the competences in the environment were varying in rank, being mere commissions, directorates-general or even secretaries of State.
All these competences of the ministry were varying between the ministries of development, agriculture and presidency, until 1993 when the term "Environment" reached the rank of ministry, creating the Ministry of Public Works, Transport and Environment. [8]
But it was not until 1996 when the Environment obtained its own ministry during the presidency of José María Aznar, creating the Ministry of Environment that was in force until 2011 (in 2008 the Ministry assumed the powers in Rural and Marine Environment [9] ).
In 2011, the new prime minister Mariano Rajoy merged this ministry with the Ministry of Agriculture, creating the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Environment (2011-2016) and later the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, Food and Environment (2016-2018).
In 2018, with the arrival of Pedro Sánchez to the premiership, he regained the ministry's autonomy by creating a ministry focused on carrying out an energy transition towards more ecological means of production, the Ministry for the Ecological Transition. [10] For this purpose Sánchez appointed Teresa Ribera as minister and her ministry assumed for the first time responsibilities on energy policy, a policy that historically belonged to the ministries of Industry or Economy.
In 2020, in order to improve the environmental policies that this department was doing, the Prime Minister promoted minister Ribera to the rank of Deputy Prime Minister [11] and it trusted her the responsibilities on the different demographic challenges that Spain had. [12] Nowadays, the official name (in Spanish) is Ministerio para la Transición Ecológica y el Reto Demográfico as a new, changed name from the previously named Ministerio del Medio Ambiente.
Despite its long history, the agency did not reach the rank of ministry until 1993:
The Ministry's structure is: [13]
Office name:
Portrait | Name (Birth–Death) | Term of office | Party | Government | Prime Minister (Tenure) | Ref. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Duration | ||||||||
Isabel Tocino (born 1949) | 6 May 1996 | 28 April 2000 | 3 years and 358 days | PP | Aznar I | José María Aznar (1996–2004) | [14] [15] | |||
Jaume Matas (born 1956) | 28 April 2000 | 3 March 2003 | 2 years and 309 days | PP | Aznar II | [16] [17] | ||||
Elvira Rodríguez (born 1957) | 3 March 2003 | 18 April 2004 | 1 year and 46 days | PP | [18] [19] | |||||
Cristina Narbona (born 1951) | 18 April 2004 | 14 April 2008 | 3 years and 362 days | PSOE | Zapatero I | José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero (2004–2011) | [20] [21] | |||
Office disestablished during this interval. [a] | ||||||||||
Teresa Ribera (born 1969) | 7 June 2018 | 13 January 2020 | 6 years and 171 days | PSOE | Sánchez I | Pedro Sánchez (2018–present) | [22] [23] [24] [25] | |||
13 January 2020 | 21 November 2023 | Sánchez II | ||||||||
21 November 2023 | 25 November 2024 | Sánchez III | ||||||||
Sara Aagesen (born 1976) | 25 November 2024 | Incumbent | 0 days | Independent | [26] |
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