A British holidaymaker is dead after a paragliding accident in Spain, and now campaigners are using his death to demand a new EU safety treaty. The victim, 34-year-old James Hartley from Manchester, crashed into a mountainside near Alicante on Tuesday. He was pronounced dead at the scene.
Sources confirm his harness failed mid-flight. The accident has reignited a long-running dispute over regulatory gaps in adventure sports across Europe. Brussels insiders tell me a draft proposal for a ‘Recreational Safety Directive’ is being circulated behind closed doors.
It would require member states to enforce mandatory inspections of equipment and licensing of instructors. But opponents say it is bureaucratic overreach. Hartley’s family is pushing for change.
‘We do not want another family to go through this,’ his mother said. The accident site has been sealed off for investigation. Spanish authorities have not yet commented on the cause of the harness failure.
Meanwhile, a leaked internal memo from the European Commission reveals they are ‘studying the feasibility’ of a treaty. Industry groups are fighting back. ‘We have not seen evidence that more regulation would have prevented this tragedy,’ a spokesman for the Adventure Sports Alliance told me.
But the numbers tell a different story. Uncovered documents show a 40% rise in paragliding fatalities across Europe since 2018. The dead include tourists and locals alike.
Most accidents involve rented equipment. Hartley’s death is just the latest in a string of incidents that campaigners say could have been prevented. The British government is staying quiet.
The Foreign Office confirmed they are providing consular support but declined to comment on the treaty. A source in the Home Office says they are ‘monitoring the situation’ but have no plans to push for changes. That might be about to change.
With Hartley’s death making headlines across the continent, the pressure is mounting. Expect a formal proposal within weeks. Until then, the skies remain unregulated.
And more tourists like Hartley will take their chances.
