However, this agency does not provide transportation services to the Armed Forces, nor to the different law enforcement agencies, which have their own car services. In the case of the ministries of Transport and of Ecological Transition, PME only provides civil transportation to government officials and not the necessary machinery to exercise some of its responsibilities.[3]
History
Before the creation of this agency, little is known about how the vehicles at the disposal of the government officials were managed. It is known that, since the beginning of the 1920s, the commander and industrial engineer Julio Álvarez Cerón was responsible for the vehicles owned by the Directorate-General for Security and some other ministerial departments. At the end of that decade, government fleet at that time had barely a hundred vehicles.[4]
Vehicle Fleet of Civil Ministries, Surveillance and Security
For this reason, president Niceto Alcalá-Zamora, at the proposal of prime minister and minister of Finance, Joaquín Chapaprieta, issued the Decree of 28 September 1935, which created the current organization with the name of "Vehicle Fleet of Civil Ministries, Surveillance and Security" (PMMCVS), coexisting with those of the ministries of War, of the Navy and the Civil Guard. The new institution was part of the Ministry of the Interior.[4] Later, it was regulated by a Decree of 9 March 1940, shaping it as the State agency in which the car services of all civil departments were concentrated, except the provincial services of the Ministry of Development (today Ministry of Transport).[5]
Between the 1940s and 1950s, the current headquarters of the agency in Madrid was built, work of architect Ambrosio Arroyo Alonso, as well as the first vehicle auctions were held to get rid of the outdated vehicles of the fleet.[4] A housing block for the agency's employees was also built in the San Cristóbal neighborhood with the help of the defunct National Housing Institute (1939–1977).[4] With the founding of SEAT in 1950, its models were used as official cars.[4]
Ministerial Vehicle Fleet
Subsequently, Decree 2764/1967, of November 23, transferred the agency to the Directorate-General for State Heritage of the Ministry of Finance, while promoting the process of unification of the State's automobile services.[6] The Decree 151/1968, of January 25, renamed it as "Ministerial Vehicle Fleet" (PMM).[7]
In the current democratic period, the Ministerial Vehicle Fleet was regulated by Royal Decree 280/1987, of January 30, and later by Law 50/1998, of December 30, on Fiscal, Administrative and Social Order Measures, which configured it as an autonomous commercial organization, attached to the Ministry of Finance through the Department's undersecretariat. A few years earlier, in 1983, the first civilian was appointed to head the agency, Eduardo Díaz Romón, and the first female drivers joined: Paula Hernando Ruiz (1988) and Arlestina Sánchez Medel (1991).[4]
State Vehicle Fleet
Following the recommendations for restructuring and modernization made by the Court of Auditors in the 1990s,[4] the Royal Decree 146/1999, of January 29, was approved, which gave the agency its current name, "State Vehicle Fleet" (PME), as well as modified its nature, structure and responsibilities,[8] and the Royal Decree 1163/1999, of July 2, which merged the Territorial Delegations and Provincial Fleets into the Government Delegations and Subdelegations.[9]
The last regulation of the agency was approved by the Council of Ministers in August 2022, although it did not represent anything new, but rather a recasting of independent regulations approved in the last twenty years.
As of 31 December 2023, the agency's fleet was composed by 678 vehicles (five more than in 2022), which traveled almost 6.3 million kilometers and consumed 363,104 litres of fuel. The electric fleet, 541 vehicles, recharged 206,918 kWh at the PME charging stations. The agency employed 1,046 people, of which 947 were drivers (859 in 2022), representing 90.53% of the workforce. 96 of these drivers were hired only in the second half of fiscal year 2023, to satisfy the extraordinary needs of the Spanish Presidency of the Council of the European Union.[1]
Of the institutions that used these vehicles, the Royal Household had assigned 43 of them, while the Office of the Prime Minister had 64. The Royal House has also their own fleet managed by the Royal Guard. Also, the royal family had six PME's armoured vehicles at their disposal (the PM's Office had 3), more than any other institution.[1]
^State Secretariat for Budget and Expenditures (January 2023). "2023 State Budget, extended to 2024"(PDF). www.sepg.pap.hacienda.gob.es. Retrieved 17 June 2024.