Salobreña will be doing its bit for Earth Hour 2023 by switching off the lights of its public monuments, such as the castle, amongst other sites.
Quoting from the Earthhour.org is probably the best way to explain what it is all about:
Since our beginnings in 2007, Earth Hour has been known for the ‘lights-off’ moment, with individuals from around the globe switching off their lights to show symbolic support for the planet and to raise awareness of the environmental issues affecting it.
More than 15 years later, we are now at a tipping point with our climate and nature crises, putting at risk the fate of our one home and all our futures. We are on course to breach by 2030 the 1.5°C global temperature increase limit set by the Paris Climate Agreement, and nature – the source of our very livelihoods and one of our biggest allies against the climate crisis – is also under severe threat, facing alarming and unprecedented rates of loss globally.
The next seven years are therefore crucial to all our futures – we have to stay under the 1.5°C climate threshold to avoid irreversible damage to our planet, and we need to reverse nature loss by 2030, ending the decade with more nature and biodiversity than we started, not less. To make this happen, individuals, communities, businesses, and governments must all urgently step up their efforts to protect and restore our one home.
With this 2030 goal in mind, we too must step things up. So this year, we’re breathing new life into Earth Hour – our brand, our work, our message, and our mission – creating the Biggest Hour for Earth. How? By calling on our supporters across the globe to switch off their lights and give an hour for Earth, spending 60 minutes doing something – anything – positive for our planet.
With our presence in over 190 countries and territories, we can use the power of the people to turn a single Earth Hour into thousands and millions of hours of action and awareness, creating a domino effect of impact that continues well beyond the 60 minutes. Amidst our increasingly divided and polarized societies, the Biggest Hour for Earth becomes a precious moment of unity, reminding the world that our one shared home needs our help and that we all can – and must – play a part in protecting it.
So, this coming Saturday (the 25th) you can contribute by turning off the lights in your house between 20.30h and 21.30h. Salobreña will turn off the castle illumination, the church outside lighting and the rockface below the castle (Walk of the Flowersetc) as well as the House of Culture Square in Lobres.
No doubt, many other towns will participate in a similar fashion.
(News: Salobrena, Costa Tropical, Granada, Andalucia)