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How to Get an Environmental Permit in Spain (2026): Mining EIA, Water Use and Natura 2000 Screening

By Global Law Experts
– posted 50 minutes ago

Understanding how to get an environmental permit is the single most consequential planning step for any mining project in Spain. The process spans multiple authorities, from Autonomous Community environmental bodies to river-basin confederations, and requires careful coordination of environmental impact assessments (EIA), water-use concessions and, increasingly in 2026, Natura 2000 screening. Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026, together with the 2025–2029 Mineral Raw Materials Plan, has sharpened regulatory scrutiny on strategic mineral projects, tightening conditions, accelerating certain review tracks and demanding more granular environmental data than in previous cycles. This guide sets out, step by step, exactly what mining operators, permitting managers and in-house counsel need to secure every approval before a shovel hits the ground.

Executive Summary and Quick Checklist

Before diving into the detail, the following checklist summarises the critical gates every mining project must pass. Industry observers expect that projects which address each item early, rather than reactively, will shave months off the overall permitting timeline.

  • EIA trigger check. Determine whether the project falls within Annex I (mandatory EIA) or Annex II (case-by-case screening) of Law 21/2013 on Environmental Assessment. Most open-pit and underground mines above the size thresholds listed in Group 2 of Annex I require a full EIA.
  • Competent authority identification. Confirm whether the EIA decision sits with the Autonomous Community environmental body or with MITECO (Ministry for the Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge) at national level.
  • Water concession or authorisation. Any abstraction, diversion or discharge of public water requires a separate application to the relevant Confederación Hidrográfica (basin authority) under the consolidated Water Act (TRLA).
  • Natura 2000 proximity. If the project site lies within or adjacent to a Site of Community Importance (SCI) or Special Protection Area (SPA), a screening test, and possibly a full Appropriate Assessment, will be required before the EIA decision can issue.
  • Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026 implications. Strategic mineral projects designated under the 2025–2029 Minerals Plan may be subject to accelerated but more condition-heavy review pathways; early engagement with the designated authority is essential.
  • Baseline data readiness. Commission hydrogeological, ecological and air-quality baseline studies at the earliest stage; incomplete data is the single most common cause of permitting delays.
  • Public consultation planning. Budget at least 30 days for the mandatory public information period and anticipate extended timelines in areas with active community opposition.
  • Timeline expectation. For a medium-scale mining project, the combined EIA-plus-water-concession process typically spans 12–24 months when well sequenced.

Who Decides: Authorities and Roles in Mining Environmental Permitting

Understanding which authority handles each permit is the first practical step toward an efficient application. Spain’s decentralised administrative structure means that competence is split across national, regional and basin-level bodies, and the point of contact varies depending on the scale and location of the project.

Local Versus National Competence

For most mining projects, the Autonomous Community (Comunidad Autónoma) where the mine is located holds environmental competence. The regional environment department, known by different names in each community (e.g., Consejería de Sostenibilidad, Medio Ambiente y Economía Azul in Andalusia), processes the EIA and issues the Environmental Impact Statement (Declaración de Impacto Ambiental, or DIA). MITECO retains authority when a project crosses Autonomous Community boundaries, affects inter-community river basins at the national level, or involves State General Administration authorisations such as certain coastal or defence zone interactions.

Who Signs the EIA Decision

The formal EIA decision is issued by the environmental organ (órgano ambiental), which is distinct from the substantive organ (órgano sustantivo), often the mining or industry directorate, that ultimately grants the mining exploitation concession. Water concessions, meanwhile, fall entirely within the jurisdiction of the Confederación Hidrográfica corresponding to the river basin where the mine abstracts or discharges water.

Authority Role When Engaged
Autonomous Community environmental body Processes EIA; issues DIA From screening stage through to final decision
MITECO National-level EIA; inter-community coordination Projects crossing regional boundaries or with national-level triggers
Confederación Hidrográfica Water concessions, abstractions and discharge permits Whenever public water is used, diverted or discharged
Regional mining/industry directorate Mining exploitation concession (administrative) After or concurrent with EIA; requires positive DIA
Local town hall (Ayuntamiento) Urban-planning compatibility; activity licence Prior to or concurrent with mining authorisation

Legal Framework for Environmental Permits in Spain: 2026 Updates

The core legislation governing how to get an environmental permit for mining in Spain is Law 21/2013, of 9 December, on Environmental Assessment, which transposed the EU EIA Directive (2011/92/EU, as amended by 2014/52/EU) into Spanish law. This statute establishes the screening, scoping, study and decision procedure that applies to all projects listed in its Annexes, including mining and quarrying operations.

Water use is governed separately by the Texto Refundido de la Ley de Aguas (TRLA, Royal Legislative Decree 1/2001), which classifies all surface and groundwater as part of the public hydraulic domain. Any private use of this resource, whether for process water, dust suppression or dewatering, requires a formal concession or authorisation from the basin Confederación Hidrográfica.

EU EIA Directive Interplay

Spanish EIA law mirrors the EU Directive’s two-tier structure: Annex I lists projects subject to mandatory EIA, while Annex II projects undergo a case-by-case screening. For mining, Annex I captures open-pit mines exceeding 25 hectares of surface area, underground mining with significant surface disturbance, and projects involving tailings or waste facilities above specific volume thresholds. Annex II covers smaller extraction activities, which the environmental authority may still subject to EIA following a screening opinion.

Natura 2000 Legal Trigger

The Habitats Directive (92/43/EEC) and the Birds Directive (2009/147/EC), transposed into Spanish law principally through Law 42/2007 on Natural Heritage and Biodiversity, require that any project likely to have a significant effect on a Natura 2000 site must undergo an Appropriate Assessment before authorisation. Early indications suggest that Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026 has reinforced this requirement for strategic mineral projects by mandating earlier Natura 2000 screening and closer coordination between environmental and mining authorities.

Step-by-Step: The EIA Spain Process for Mining Projects

The environmental impact assessment in Spain follows a structured sequence mandated by Law 21/2013. Each stage generates specific documents, engages defined authorities, and carries its own timeline. Below is the complete procedure as it applies to mining projects in 2026.

Scoping and Terms of Reference

  1. Screening (Annex II projects only). The project promoter submits a screening request (solicitud de consulta previa) to the environmental organ, providing a preliminary project description, location map and initial environmental characterisation. The authority has a statutory period to determine whether a full EIA is required. The outcome is either a positive screening decision (full EIA proceeds) or a negative one (project proceeds without EIA, subject to conditions).
  2. Scoping document (Documento de Alcance). For projects that proceed to EIA, the promoter requests a scoping opinion from the environmental organ. The authority consults relevant public administrations and publishes the scoping document, which sets out the terms of reference, required baseline studies, methodologies, and issues to be addressed in the Environmental Impact Study (ESIA).
  3. Baseline studies. Acting on the scoping document, the promoter commissions field studies covering fauna and flora inventories, hydrogeological surveys, air-quality and noise baseline, soil contamination, and cultural heritage. For mining projects, specific attention must be paid to groundwater connectivity, tailings geochemistry (acid mine drainage risk), dust dispersion modelling, and cumulative impacts with nearby operations.

Typical ESIA Sections for Mining

  1. ESIA preparation. The Environmental and Social Impact Study document must include, at a minimum: a full project description (extraction method, processing, waste management, closure plan); identification and assessment of direct, indirect and cumulative environmental impacts; proposed preventive, corrective and compensatory measures; an environmental monitoring programme; and a non-technical summary accessible to the public. Mining-specific sections typically cover geology and mineralogy, mine-waste management plans, water balance and dewatering strategy, rehabilitation and progressive closure, and biodiversity offset proposals where relevant.
  2. Public consultation and participation. The substantive organ (mining authority) submits the ESIA to public information (información pública) for a minimum of 30 days, published in the relevant official gazette and on the authority’s website. Simultaneously, the environmental organ consults affected public administrations, including the basin Confederación Hidrográfica, cultural heritage bodies, and municipal councils. Public submissions and consultation responses are compiled into a report and forwarded to the environmental organ.
  3. Formal ESIA submission. After incorporating responses from the public consultation, the promoter submits the final ESIA, together with any supplementary technical reports, to the substantive organ, which forwards the complete file to the environmental organ for evaluation.
  4. Technical review. The environmental organ conducts a technical assessment, cross-referencing the ESIA against the scoping terms of reference, public submissions, and any Natura 2000 screening or Appropriate Assessment findings. Additional information requests are common at this stage and can add two to four months.
  5. EIA decision, the Declaración de Impacto Ambiental (DIA). The environmental organ issues the DIA, which either approves the project subject to binding conditions (mitigation measures, monitoring requirements, financial guarantees) or refuses it. The DIA is published in the Official Gazette of the relevant Autonomous Community and, for national projects, in the BOE.
  6. Appeal timelines. The DIA may be challenged through administrative review (recurso de alzada) within one month of publication, or directly before the administrative courts (recurso contencioso-administrativo) within two months. Third parties with legitimate interest, including environmental NGOs, also have standing to challenge.

The overall EIA process for a mining project typically spans 6–12 months in straightforward cases. Complex operations, large open pits, projects near Natura 2000 sites, or those with significant water interactions, commonly require 9–18 months from scoping request to published DIA.

Water Use Permits in Spain: Abstraction, Concessions and Discharge for Mines

Water is almost always a gating permit for mining operations. Whether the project needs process water, must dewater an excavation, or will discharge treated effluent to a surface watercourse, the operator must obtain a formal water concession or authorisation from the appropriate Confederación Hidrográfica. This process runs parallel to, but is legally independent from, the EIA.

Applying to the Confederación Hidrográfica

The application procedure for a water use permit in Spain follows these steps:

  1. Identify the basin authority. Spain has 16 inter-community Confederaciones Hidrográficas (e.g., Guadalquivir, Ebro, Duero, Miño-Sil) and several intra-community basin bodies. The authority with jurisdiction is determined by the river basin where the water is abstracted or discharged.
  2. Prepare the application dossier. Documentation typically includes: a detailed hydrogeological study for groundwater abstractions (aquifer characterisation, pumping-test results, drawdown projections); a water-balance diagram for the mine; flow rates requested (litres per second and annual volume); proposed intake and discharge points georeferenced on cadastral mapping; and a project description linking the water use to the mining activity.
  3. Submit and public notice. The application is filed with the relevant Confederación (many now accept electronic submission). The authority publishes a notice in the provincial Official Gazette and on its website, inviting third-party observations for a statutory period.
  4. Technical evaluation and conditions. Basin authority engineers evaluate the application against the Hydrological Plan for that basin, checking available water resources, priority uses, and ecological flow requirements. In drought years, a recurring factor in southern and central Spain, temporary restrictions or conditional approvals are common.
  5. Grant of concession or authorisation. Upon approval, the Confederación issues the concession (for uses exceeding certain thresholds and durations) or authorisation (for smaller or temporary uses), specifying permitted volumes, abstraction rates, monitoring obligations, and discharge quality limits.

Surface Water Discharge Permits and Monitoring Obligations

Separate from the abstraction concession, any discharge of mine water or process effluent into a surface watercourse requires a discharge authorisation (autorización de vertido) from the basin authority. The application must include a characterisation of the effluent (pH, suspended solids, heavy metals, conductivity), proposed treatment methods, and a self-monitoring programme. Industry observers expect that basin authorities are applying increasingly stringent limits in 2026, particularly for parameters associated with acid mine drainage.

Permit Type Authority Typical Timeline
Water concession (groundwater or surface abstraction) Confederación Hidrográfica 6–12 months
Discharge authorisation (surface water) Confederación Hidrográfica / regional body 3–6 months
Temporary dewatering authorisation Confederación Hidrográfica 2–4 months

Natura 2000 Screening and Appropriate Assessment for Mines

Spain hosts the largest area of Natura 2000-designated land in the European Union, meaning that a significant proportion of mining concession areas either overlap with or lie adjacent to protected habitats. The screening and, where necessary, Appropriate Assessment (AA) process can become the most time-sensitive element of the entire environmental permitting sequence.

Screening Checklist

Under Article 6(3) of the Habitats Directive, transposed through Law 42/2007, any plan or project not directly connected with or necessary to the management of a Natura 2000 site, but likely to have a significant effect on it, must undergo an AA. The screening step asks a single question: can significant effects on the site’s conservation objectives be excluded? If the answer is no, or uncertain, a full AA is required. Mining projects trigger screening when they meet any of the following conditions:

  • The project footprint lies wholly or partially within a Natura 2000 site.
  • The project is located outside the site boundary but could affect it through water drawdown, dust dispersion, noise, vibration, or habitat fragmentation.
  • Cumulative effects with other existing or planned projects could reach the significance threshold.

Mitigation Hierarchy and Possible Outcomes

If the AA concludes that the project will adversely affect site integrity, authorisation can only proceed under the strict derogation procedure of Article 6(4): the absence of alternative solutions, imperative reasons of overriding public interest (IROPI), and compensatory measures approved by the European Commission. For most mining projects, the practical strategy focuses on modifying the project design at the ESIA stage to avoid significant effects, through setbacks from sensitive habitats, engineered water-management systems to prevent drawdown impacts, seasonal restrictions on blasting during breeding periods, and rehabilitation bonds that fund long-term habitat restoration.

Early indications suggest that Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026 now requires mining operators to submit a preliminary Natura 2000 compatibility statement alongside the initial screening request, accelerating the identification of potential conflicts.

Permitting Sequencing and Combined Application Strategy

The single greatest source of delay in mining environmental permitting is poor sequencing. Operators who treat the EIA, water concession and Natura 2000 assessment as entirely serial processes can face cumulative timelines of three years or more. The recommended approach runs key workstreams in parallel:

Phase Action Indicative Duration
Months 1–3 Secure land rights; commission baseline studies (ecology, hydrogeology, air quality); submit screening request to environmental organ 3 months
Months 3–5 Receive scoping document; begin ESIA preparation; file water concession application with Confederación Hidrográfica concurrently 2 months
Months 5–10 Complete baseline fieldwork; prepare ESIA; conduct Natura 2000 screening (if applicable); submit preliminary compatibility statement 5 months
Months 10–13 Public consultation period (30+ days); respond to observations; submit final ESIA 3 months
Months 13–18 Technical review by environmental organ; additional information requests; coordinate AA if Natura 2000 applies; water concession evaluation running in parallel 5 months
Months 18–22 DIA issued; water concession granted; apply for mining exploitation concession from mining directorate 4 months

Pitfalls that trigger a restart: submitting an ESIA that does not conform to the scoping terms of reference; failing to include the Natura 2000 screening report with the EIA file; filing the water concession after the DIA is issued rather than in parallel (adding 6–12 months); and neglecting to obtain municipal urban-planning compatibility before the mining authorisation stage.

Post-Approval Obligations, Monitoring and Environmental Liability in Spain

Obtaining the DIA and water concession is not the end of the environmental permitting story. The conditions attached to these approvals create binding, ongoing obligations that carry significant financial and legal consequences if breached.

Typical Monitoring Parameters for Mines

DIA conditions routinely require periodic monitoring of: surface and groundwater quality (heavy metals, pH, total suspended solids, nitrates); air quality (particulate matter PM10 and PM2.5, silica dust); noise levels at receptor locations; biodiversity indicators (protected species populations, habitat condition); and geotechnical stability of waste dumps and tailings facilities. Reports are submitted to the environmental organ on a quarterly, biannual or annual basis, depending on the parameter and the specific DIA conditions.

Enforcement and Penalties

Non-compliance with permit conditions can result in administrative sanctions ranging from formal warnings to fines exceeding €2 million for very serious infractions under Law 21/2013 and the relevant Autonomous Community legislation. Environmental liability in Spain is further governed by Law 26/2007 on Environmental Liability, which imposes a strict-liability regime for damage to natural resources (water, soil, species, habitats) caused by activities listed in its Annex III, a list that includes mining and mineral extraction. Operators are required to maintain financial guarantees, typically in the form of closure bonds, insurance policies or bank guarantees, calculated to cover the full cost of site restoration and post-closure monitoring.

Practical Checklist by Authority and Sample Timeline

The following comparison table consolidates the major permits, the authority responsible, and the indicative review periods that mining environmental permitting teams should plan around in 2026:

Permit / Authorisation Competent Authority Typical Review Time (Indicative)
EIA decision (project requiring full EIA) Autonomous Community environmental authority (MITECO for national-level projects) 6–12 months (complex mines often 9–18 months)
Water concession / authorisation (surface or groundwater) Confederación Hidrográfica (basin authority) 6–12 months (may be paused during drought restrictions)
Discharge permit (surface water) Confederación Hidrográfica / regional environment body 3–6 months
Natura 2000 Appropriate Assessment Autonomous Community (European Commission if IROPI derogation required) 3–12 months (depends on data requirements)
Mining exploitation concession Regional mining/industry directorate 3–6 months (after positive DIA)

For a medium-sized mine with moderate environmental sensitivity, the likely practical effect of well-sequenced parallel applications is a total timeline of 18–22 months from the start of baseline studies to receipt of the final mining exploitation concession. Projects near Natura 2000 sites or in water-stressed basins should add a contingency of 4–6 months.

Case Study: Mining Permits in Andalusia

Andalusia offers a useful illustration of regional variation in Spain’s mining environmental permitting landscape. The Consejería de Sostenibilidad, Medio Ambiente y Economía Azul serves as the environmental organ, while the Dirección General de Industria, Energía y Minas within the Consejería de Industria handles mining authorisations. Water concessions for the Guadalquivir basin, the most relevant for many Andalusian mining projects, are processed by the Confederación Hidrográfica del Guadalquivir based in Seville.

Practitioners familiar with mining permits in Andalusia note that the region’s extensive Natura 2000 coverage (roughly 29% of its territory) makes the screening and AA process a near-universal requirement. The Andalusian authorities have also been among the first to implement the preliminary Natura 2000 compatibility statement envisaged under Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026. Early indications suggest that projects in the Iberian Pyrite Belt and the marble districts of Almería are experiencing closer scrutiny of water-balance calculations and acid-drainage mitigation plans than in previous permitting cycles.

How to Get an Environmental Permit: Next Steps for Mining Operators

Securing an environmental permit for a mining project in Spain in 2026 requires mastering the interplay between the EIA, water-concession and Natura 2000 regimes, and doing so with the right sequencing to avoid costly delays. Three immediate actions will position any project for the fastest possible path to approval: first, commission comprehensive baseline studies covering hydrogeology, ecology and air quality before submitting any formal application; second, file the water concession application with the Confederación Hidrográfica concurrently with the EIA scoping request rather than waiting for the DIA; and third, conduct a preliminary Natura 2000 screening at the project-design stage so that mitigation can be built into the ESIA from the outset.

For guidance tailored to a specific project or region, qualified mining law specialists in Spain can provide the detailed compliance support needed to navigate these overlapping regulatory requirements.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Daniel Roca Vivas at BUFETE PRAT ROCA, S.L.P., a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. BOE, Ley 21/2013, de evaluación ambiental (consolidated text)
  2. MITECO, Environmental Assessment guidance
  3. Squire Patton Boggs, Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026 briefing
  4. European Commission, Environmental Impact Assessment
  5. Confederación Hidrográfica Miño‑Sil, Authorisations and concessions
  6. RM-AS, International and Spanish Regimes on Environmental Impact Assessments

FAQs

What is the environmental impact assessment (EIA) in Spain?
The EIA in Spain is the formal process, governed by Law 21/2013 on Environmental Assessment, through which the competent environmental authority evaluates the potential environmental effects of a proposed project before authorising it. For mining projects, the EIA culminates in a Declaración de Impacto Ambiental (DIA), a binding decision that either approves the project subject to conditions or refuses it. The process includes screening, scoping, preparation of an Environmental Impact Study (ESIA), public consultation, technical review and decision.
The application follows a defined sequence: (1) submit a screening request if the project falls under Annex II of Law 21/2013; (2) request a scoping document from the environmental organ; (3) prepare the ESIA in accordance with the scoping terms of reference; (4) submit the ESIA for public consultation through the substantive organ (mining authority); (5) respond to public observations and submit the final ESIA; and (6) await the technical review and DIA decision. Applications are submitted to the Autonomous Community environmental body in most cases, or to MITECO for national-level projects.
A water concession or authorisation is required whenever a mining operation proposes to use, divert or discharge public water, which includes virtually all surface water and groundwater in Spain. Typical triggers include process water abstraction, pit dewatering, dust suppression using watercourse supplies, and effluent discharge. The application is made to the Confederación Hidrográfica with jurisdiction over the relevant river basin, accompanied by hydrogeological studies, a water-balance diagram and discharge characterisation data.
An Appropriate Assessment is triggered whenever a mining project is likely to have a significant effect on a Natura 2000 site, whether the project lies within the site boundary or outside it. The initial screening test asks whether significant effects on the site’s conservation objectives can be excluded. If they cannot, due to factors such as groundwater drawdown, dust, noise, habitat fragmentation or cumulative impacts, a full Appropriate Assessment must be completed before the EIA decision can be issued.
The most common causes are: incomplete or poor-quality baseline data (requiring supplementary field seasons); late identification of Natura 2000 issues (forcing the EIA process to pause while an AA is conducted); inadequate hydrogeological studies (prompting additional information requests from the basin authority); failure to file water concession applications in parallel with the EIA; and unresolved urban-planning compatibility with the local municipality.
Operators must implement the monitoring programme specified in the DIA conditions, which typically covers water quality, air quality, noise, biodiversity and geotechnical stability. Reports must be submitted to the environmental organ at the frequency stipulated in the permit, commonly quarterly for water parameters and annually for ecological surveys. All monitoring data and corrective actions should be documented and retained for inspection, and contingency procedures must be in place for exceedance events.
Royal Decree‑Law 7/2026, adopted in the context of the 2025–2029 Mineral Raw Materials Plan, introduces an accelerated, but more condition-intensive, review pathway for projects classified as strategic for Spain’s critical raw materials supply. Industry observers expect that the practical effect will include earlier mandatory Natura 2000 compatibility statements, tighter coordination protocols between mining and environmental authorities, and enhanced financial guarantee requirements. Operators should consult the official text published in the BOE and seek project-specific legal advice to assess how the new provisions apply to their operations.

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How to Get an Environmental Permit in Spain (2026): Mining EIA, Water Use and Natura 2000 Screening

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