Thousands evacuated as wildfires rage across Spain during scorching heatwave
Firefighters had largely contained a blaze outside Madrid that broke out Monday night, authorities said Tuesday. The fire, which mainly burned scrub and grassland, killed a man who suffered burns on 98% of his body, emergency services said.
The fire affected more than 1,000 hectares (2,470 acres). By Tuesday morning, authorities were allowing some residents back into their homes.
Elsewhere, firefighters were battling blazes in several Spanish regions including Castile and Leon, Castile-La Mancha, Andalusia and Galicia. Numerous fires forced thousands of people to evacuate, including holiday-goers in Cadiz after a fire sent huge plumes of smoke into the air visible Monday from some beaches at the southern tip of Spain.
People rest at a help center a day after they were evacuated from the Spanish town of Tarifa due to wildfires, in Zahara de los Atunes, Spain, on Tuesday. Reuters
More than 700 firefighters in Portugal were working to control a fire in Trancoso, about 350 kilometers (217 miles) northeast of Lisbon. Smaller fires were burning further north.
Dry vegetation and strong winds can make forest fires spread rapidly and out of control.
Scientists warn climate change is exacerbating the frequency and intensity of heat and dryness in Southern Europe, making the region more vulnerable to wildfires and the health impacts of extreme heat.
A firefighting helicopter flies over Tarifa, a day after many people, including locals and tourists, were evacuated from this town, Spain, on Tuesday. Reuters
Europe is warming faster than any other continent, with temperatures increasing at twice the speed as the global average since the 1980s, according to the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service. Last year was the hottest year on record in Europe and globally, the monitoring agency said.
The burning of fuels like gasoline, oil and coal release heat-trapping gasses are the main driver of climate change. Deforestation, wildfires and many kinds of factories also contribute.
Associated Press

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


ARN News Center
2 hours ago
- ARN News Center
Spain battles 14 major fires with more expected
Spain battled 14 major fires driven by high winds and aggravated by heat on Friday as authorities warned of "unfavourable conditions" to tackle flames that have already killed seven people and burned an area the size of London. Firefighters have been battling to put out blazes across southern Europe in one of the worst summers for wildfires in 20 years. And a nearly two-week heatwave and southerly winds were worsening the situation in Spain, Virginia Barcones, director general of emergency services, said on Friday. "In the western part of the country the situation is extremely worrying," Barcones said on RTVE. In Galicia, several fires converged to form a large blaze, forcing the closure of highways and rail services to the region. As fire spread from Galicia's Ourense province to neighbouring Zamora, provoking evacuations, some stayed behind to protect their homes. Spain's national weather agency AEMET warned of extreme fire risk in the north and west of the country, as temperatures are expected to reach up to 40 degrees Celsius on the north coast. "Today will be another very difficult day, with an extreme risk of new fires," Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez wrote on X. FIRES SPREADING QUICKLY A fire near Molezuelas de la Carballeda in the Castile and Leon region - one of the largest in Spain's history - had not advanced since Thursday. That wildfire had, at one point, been spreading by 4,000 hectares per hour, said Eduardo Diego, national government representative for the region. A fire near Badajoz in the Extremadura region, meanwhile, burned 2,500 hectares in a few hours before being brought under control. "It was very fast with enormous growth, but it has been possible to tackle it," Jose Luis Quintana, the national government representative for the region, told RTVE. The fires caused the closure of more than half a dozen roads on a busy bank holiday weekend, leaving travelers stuck at the height of summer holidays. In the town of Oimbra in Ourense province, where three firefighters were seriously injured, a man was arrested for causing a fire by using his tractor when it was prohibited, police said. Two people were also arrested in Costa da Morte in Galicia for provoking fires by illegally burning copper cables to extract the metal, according to the Interior Ministry. Wildfires have burned more than 157,000 hectares in Spain so far this year, almost double the annual average, according to the European Union's Forest Fire Information Service. In neighbouring Portugal, meanwhile, thousands of firefighters were battling five large blazes in central and northern parts of the country, with one fire in Trancoso, some 350 km northeast of Lisbon, now raging for six days. Around 300 residents were evacuated on Friday from the village of Covanca near Piodao, an area of central Portugal popular with tourists, after a wildfire broke out on Wednesday.


Al Etihad
11 hours ago
- Al Etihad
Parts of England to hit 30 degrees as fire crews tackle major blaze
15 Aug 2025 09:19 LONDON (PA Media/dpa)Parts of England will swelter through temperatures of up to 30 degrees Celsius on Friday as firefighters grapple with a lack of resources amid the Met Office forecast patchy cloud across the north with some light rain and the odd shower in this, temperatures will remain warm, particularly across England and London, highs of 30 degrees are predicted, while Cardiff will only be slightly cooler at 29 north, Belfast and Edinburgh are expected to be a little milder, with temperatures reaching 22 degrees and 24 degrees the heat concentrates across southern and south-western England, temperatures will climb to 30 degrees in Salisbury and 29 degrees in Cambridge, while central areas like Nottingham are also expected to see highs of 28 comes as firefighters travelled across the UK to help tackle the major wildfire at Holt Heath, Dorset, fuelling calls for increased firefighting Selby, Fire Brigades Union assistant general secretary, said services had undergone "14 years of austerity.""The loss of one in five firefighter posts to cuts, with fire engines taken off the run and fire stations closed up and down the country, means that there is no resilience left," he said."Wildfires are intensive incidents, requiring a large number of firefighters and specialist resources. They are becoming increasingly severe and frequent as a result of the climate emergency."Dorset and Wiltshire Fire and Rescue estimated the blaze had burned through 72 hectares and would remain on the scene overnight."Crews are still working in three sectors, dealing with an increase in flare-ups, hotspots and deep-seated fires identified using drones," the statement read. "This is due to the weather conditions."Crews travelled from Merseyside, South Wales, Greater Manchester, Leicestershire, Surrey, Lincolnshire, Hampshire and the Isle of Wight, Avon, Essex and Kent among others, to assist local emergency health alerts were extended into next week for much of have said the country is suffering from "nationally significant" water shortfalls. The national drought group, which includes the Met Office, regulators, government, water companies and other organisations, has met as five areas of the country remain in drought, with six more in prolonged dry weather status.


Gulf Today
a day ago
- Gulf Today
Typhoon Podul makes landfall in Taiwan
Typhoon Podul made landfall in Taiwan on Wednesday, where authorities closed schools and government offices as heavy rain threatened more damage to agriculture in the island's southeast. The storm hit Taitung county on the east coast shortly after noon, moving across the southern third of the island at about 36 kilometres (22 miles) per hour, at which rate it would head out to the Taiwan Strait and China by late afternoon, according to the Central Weather Administration. It was unclear how serious the storm would be, with high waves and winds seen across much of the southeast but no major rain as of yet, according to the agency. Such storms typically hit the east coast hard before losing speed and strength as they pass over the Central Mountain Range before continuing toward the Chinese coast. Podul measured 120 kilometres (75 miles) across and was expected to broaden even while losing strength as the storm moved westward across the Taiwan Strait. A woman sits in front of a screen displaying information on cancelled domestic flights, as Typhoon Podul approaches the country, in Taipei, Taiwan, on Wednesday. Reuters The areas affected are well south of the capital, Taipei, along with Taiwan's main international airport and high-tech industrial base. Around a dozen flights that would have travelled south toward the path of the storm were delayed or cancelled. The counties and cities of Tainan, Kaohsiung, Chiayi, Yunlin, Pingtung and Hualien on the east coast and the island group of Penghu in the Taiwan Strait were taking the brunt of the storm. Along with flooding, typhoons routinely damage fruit and other cash crops and bring landslides through the island's centre. Much of central and southern Taiwan was badly hit by heavy rains in recent weeks that caused severe damage to crops but minimal casualties, while also knocking out electricity to rural areas that took weeks to repair. Recovery crews are on alert. Associated Press