Overview
- Interior Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said the trailer-style units will be used on short work stretches and other high-risk points.
- The devices will mirror the models already used in Catalunya and France, and Trànsit reports about 150,000 fines so far in 2025 from its four units.
- DGT chief Pere Navarro will travel to France to study operations before adapting the system to Spanish roads.
- Separately, six new fixed radars are being installed this month on the A-7, N-340, A-31, CV-70 and CV-920 in Alicante, pending CEM certification for activation late 2025 or early 2026.
- Enforcement thresholds have tightened this summer, with fixed cameras applying the rule of 3 and mobile units triggering from a 5% excess.