
Ma-10 without cameras: Why does the waiting in the Tramuntana take so long?
The announced 32 surveillance cameras on the Ma-10 are still missing. Between bureaucratic loops, technical questions and residents' concerns, the Tramuntana risks becoming an open-air racetrack — and these short-term measures could help.
Ma-10 without cameras: Why does the waiting in the Tramuntana take so long?
Early in the morning on the Ma-10, cold stone and the scent of pines mingle, and engine and exhaust noise echo in the gorges of the Tramuntana. Visitors stop to photograph the view, residents count the overtaking maneuvers — and wait for the 32 announced cameras that are supposed to penalize speeding and clarify accidents. But the cameras are not there. The question discussed in cafés from Deià to Valldemossa is: Why is a seemingly simple safety project taking so long?
Bureaucratic loops, technical questions and a touch of red tape
The Consell emphasizes that it is an EU-certified model, coordinated with DGT guidelines on traffic control systems, with a cost of around €1.2 million. On paper plausible. In practice, it stalls on procurement procedures, formal checks and permits — typical administrative brakes that can slow projects on Mallorca. But that does not explain everything.
Important and often underestimated are the technical and GDPR rules on processing image data details: What image data will be captured? How long will recordings be stored? Who has access? Who is responsible for maintenance and calibration? These questions determine whether the devices really help or merely serve as an expensive fig leaf. An unsuitable camera type or a wrong placement on a bend instead of a true hotspot can massively reduce effectiveness.
The experience on site: noise, speeding, sleepless nights
In the evenings groups of motorcycles gather at viewpoints, exhausts roar, tires squeal — this is not a postcard, this is everyday life for residents. Noise becomes a health issue: sleep disturbances, increased stress and the constant fear of an accident. For many people the Ma-10 is a natural and cultural heritage suffering under reckless driving. A neighbor from Deià sums it up: “You hear the machines, not the birds.”
What is missing in the public debate
The discussion usually revolves around speed and surveillance — understandable, but too narrow. One often overlooked aspect is the economic effect: local cafés and small restaurants at viewpoints live from short stops. Strict controls could change visitor flows and have economic side effects.
Another often underestimated effect is displacement: Will racing be pushed onto side roads if the Ma-10 is more closely monitored? Without a spatially comprehensive strategy the problem may simply move elsewhere.
And then there is the question of trust: data protection and transparency. Many rightly ask who can see license plates, how long data is stored and whether there will be a public register of recordings and sanctions. Missing answers breed mistrust — and that makes every technical measure politically more difficult.
Concrete opportunities and short-term measures
The complete solution with 32 cameras takes time. But there are realistic short-term steps that can be effective:
1. Prioritization of hotspots: Instead of waiting for all 32 units, a clearly visible pilot location (e.g. Mirador de ses Barques) should be equipped immediately. Visible control works as a deterrent and builds trust.
2. Mobile measurement technology and noise monitoring: Temporary speed-camera trailers and stationary noise meters provide data, document problems and offer short-term deterrence.
3. Increased presence of the Guardia Civil traffic patrol information: Targeted patrols in the evening and night hours, backed by clearly communicated sanctions, can quickly reduce misconduct.
4. Transparency and citizen participation: A public dashboard with procurement status, timeline and data protection rules as well as the involvement of local initiatives in monitoring and reporting would create trust.
5. Infrastructure rather than just technology: Small structural interventions — additional guardrails, chokepoints, visible speed markings or speed humps at critical points — change driving behavior without long procurement processes.
A realistic outlook
The Tramuntana remains one of Mallorca's most valuable landscape chapters — but it is not an open-air racetrack. Cameras can be part of a solution, but they only bring lasting effect if administrative action, transparency and short-term measures work together. Without visible progress residents' frustration grows: they are not only counting cars, they are counting the days without protection.
If you go to the mountains this weekend: watch the curves, keep your foot off the gas, respect people and the landscape. And if you live here: keep at it, document, ask — politely but persistently. Administrative statements are often politely worded. Life on the Ma-10 needs concrete actions.
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