Thanks for the tip JPL, we don't have sattelite TV but you may have misunderstood when I said 'hard to get the right news". I meant it's impossible to find unbiased Spanish news media. The mainstream here are either flat out alarmists with reports like you mentioned (I have seen no panic buying in my neighbourhood, and the shelves here are always half empty on a Monday anyway ....) or flat out pro-government, reassuring us there's no cause for alarm and the filling stations won't run out of gas.
National TV was showing footage of the queues at the gas stations over the weekend, and people loading their shopping trolleys, but it was not a scene of mass-panic buying. More like Christmas shopping time really.
These truckers blockades at the French border are a tradition. At the slightest provocation French and Spanish truckers will become, well, truculent
pedalling faster: Spain has a growing network of electrified bullet trains, the AVE, however, there are doubts the unfinished and projected lines will actually run anything like their potential unless Spain does something about its piss poor electric grid. Most of our electricity comes from JPL's neck of the woods. Makes a mockery of the socialist government pledge never to build another nuclear power station, most of the stuff we get glows in the dark anyway
Where I live, Almeria (200,000 population) on the coast bordering the desert, we have a SINGLE train track for in and out and it's been that way since before the civil war. The local airport will happily send you to parts of Germany, the UK, and in the summer months if you're lucky maybe a charter flight to somewhere exotic, like Belgium. But the link between here and Madrid for example, is still highly priced with one of the national carriers charging 200Euros plus for a one way. By car, it takes five hours breaking no speed limits and stopping only twice. By rail, 7 hours. The high speed rail links Barcelona to Madrid, and from Madrid to Sevilla, and Malaga. The AVE Madrid-Sevilla takes just under three hours. By car from here it takes 5 hours by ordinary train. No AVE. And if we wanted to take the train to Barcelona (a mere 1000 K approximately) we'd be sitting on it for 13 HOURS!! So, as far as we are concerned, we may as well still be living in the dark ages. Not that this is a bad thing in terms of PO.
Spanish transport infrastructure is third-world, pushing you to take the highway. It would be a disaster in times of real crisis. (I don't think this is, it is just another manifestation of stupid economics.) Not only that, but the Spanish rail gauge is not European standard. Franco bought his tracks cheap from Russia. When you travel by rail from Spain to France, you get a bumpy ride at the border while the train has to stop and get itself compatible- not sure how they do that, but it's quite a procedure! Obviously the new AVE tracks are aimed at connecting London with Malaga via Paris, so those are up to date.