19th January 2026
Barcelona NewsCatalonia NewsMadrid NewsMain NewsValencia News

Spain’s central government to cover €1.7bn cost to rebuild all ‘municipal infrastructure’ in flood-hit Valencia

The Spanish government will cover the full cost of rebuilding schools, libraries and other municipal buildings damaged in last year’s deadly floods in Valencia, the socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez has said.

The central government had initially said it would cover 50% of the estimated cost of €1.7 billion.

But it will now pay 100%, Sánchez said after meeting mayors from the hardest-hit municipalities in the eastern region of Valencia (main image).

‘We are talking about 100 administrative centres, more or less 45 nursery schools, 58 libraries, 55 sports centres, 40 day centres, 16 markets and many more damaged buildings,’ the prime minister said.

‘The media spotlight may have shifted to other issues, but as we said from the beginning of this crisis, the government of Spain will not look away from Valencia,’ he added.

The central government will also pick up the full €500 million tab to repair the damage done to water treatment, supply and sanitation infrastructure by the floods, Sánchez said.

Sánchez’s government has until now put together aid packages collectively worth €16.6 billion in grants and loans to help stricken citizens. ALSO READ: Sánchez defends central government’s response to Valencia floods, as aid rises to €16.6bn.

The October 2024 floods caused significant damage in about 80 cities and claimed 232 lives nationwide. Most of the deaths were in Valencia province.

ALSO READ: Royals attend memorial service in Valencia for victims of flooding.

ALSO READ: Regional president of Valencia admits to ‘mistakes’ in handling flood disaster, but refuses to resign. 

Sign up for the FREE Weekly Newsletter from Spain in English.

Please support Spain in English with a donation.

Click here to get your business activity or services listed on our DIRECTORY.

Click here for further details on how to ADVERTISE with us.

Recent Posts

Train crash probe points to possible damaged track, amid uncertainty over cause or consequence

News Desk

Sánchez vows ‘to get to the truth’ about cause of train tragedy, as Spain declares three days of mourning

News Desk

Julio Iglesias argues Spanish courts lack jurisdiction over alleged abuse case

News Desk

RENFE president: human error ‘practically ruled out’ as cause of high-speed train collision in Andalusia

News Desk

At least 40 dead, dozens injured, after high-speed trains collide in southern Spain

News Desk

As EU rejects Trump’s tariffs, Sánchez says US move on Greenland would make Putin ‘happiest man on Earth’

News Desk

Leave a Comment