logo
Wildfire threatens Marseille, shuts down airport in southern France

Wildfire threatens Marseille, shuts down airport in southern France

RNZ News08-07-2025
People look on near the Plage des Corbieres, in Marseille, southern France on July 8, 2025, as a smoke from a wildfire rages in the background.
Photo:
AFP / Clement Mahoudeau
A fast-moving wildfire reached the outskirts of Marseille, France's second-largest city, on Tuesday (local time), leading its airport to be shut down, with residents told to stay indoors and shut all openings to be safe from the smoke.
The blaze, fanned by winds of up to 70 kilometres per hour, could be smelled in the centre of Marseille, residents said, as thick clouds of smoke hovered over the city.
"It's very striking - apocalyptic even," said Monique Baillard, a resident of Les Pennes-Mirabeau, a town north of Marseille where the fire, which has now burned across around 350 hectares, started.
A police officer tries to put off the fire in a car during a wildfire, in L'Estaque district of Marseille, southern France on July 8, 2025.
Photo:
AFP / Clement Mahoudeau
Wildfires, which have become
more destructive in Mediterranean countries
in recent years due to climate change, were also raging in northeastern Spain, where large parts of the country were on high alert for fires.
Last week there were fires on the Greek island of Crete and in Athens, as much of Europe sweltered in an early summer heatwave.
As the fire was spreading, residents of Marseille's 16th borough, which borders Les Pennes-Mirabeau, were also instructed by the prefecture to stay home, close doors and shutters and put damp cloths on any openings.
"The fire that started in Pennes-Mirabeau is now at the gates of Marseille," mayor Benoit Payan said on X.
One bank worker reached by phone said: "The sky is grey with ash, and the smell of fire is very strong in the centre of Marseille."
Residents were told not to evacuate unless ordered to, to leave roads free for rescue services.
"At this stage, populations must remain confined," the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur prefecture posted on X. "Close shutters, doors, keep your property clear for emergency services, and do not travel on the roads."
The local fire service said on X that 168 firefighters had been deployed to fight the blaze. Fire engines and helicopters were also being used.
A spokesperson for Marseille airport, France's fourth-busiest, said planes had not been taking off or landing since around midday and some flights had been diverted to Nice, Nimes and other regional airports. It was unclear when the airport would reopen.
Train lines heading north and west from Marseille were suspended due to a fire near the tracks, the SNCF train operator said.
Meanwhile, a wildfire that started near Narbonne, in southwestern France, was still active on Monday, fanned by winds of 60km/h.
Some 2000 hectares have burnt, the local prefecture said.
-Reuters
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Paying for the reality of climate change
Paying for the reality of climate change

RNZ News

time19 hours ago

  • RNZ News

Paying for the reality of climate change

Floodwaters washed through Te Paranui Animal and Farm Sanctuary, near SH1 at Tuamarina, in Tasman, overnight between 27 and 28 June, 2025. Photo: Supplied/ Facebook The 100-year floods are rolling in on a regular basis; the rain doesn't let up; no one wants a cliff-top property anymore. Climate change is no longer just about things you can't see or touch. It's about running from rising water and bailing out the basement. "I think there has been a lot of emphasis both in reporting and in people's understanding of climate change ... and the science behind that and how it's getting worse," says RNZ In Depth reporter Kate Newton. "We're now starting to shift our focus because of these severe weather events that we're seeing more frequently, and at a greater level of severity, to what that actually means for us now, and the fact that climate change is no longer this far-off, distant prospect, but something that is affecting real people and real lives, at this very moment." Today on The Detail we look at how we adapt to this new normal, and who will pay for it, after a report by an Independent Reference Group recommended essentially that the days of property buy-outs have a limited life . The reference group included economists, iwi, bankers, insurance and local government representatives and was set up by the Ministry for the Environment. Newton goes through the findings on climate mitigation and adaption, which she says are politically unpalatable, and extremely expensive. "There's a whole lot that goes into it and every step of it is complex and every step of it is expensive. But we also need to remember that even if we do nothing, it's still expensive. "I think the top estimates of costs involved with Cyclone Gabrielle was $14.5 billion - it's a huge amount of money. "But you're looking at things like, even just understanding where the risk is, and how severe that risk is, and how it might change in the future - it's a huge amount of work." The government wants bipartisan support on decisions because future certainty is required but also, Newton points out, because of the bleak message it's likely to send - in the words of one critic: "You are on your own" . But firm decisions are unlikely to come any time soon. "It's something that's been a long time coming and I think [climate change minister] Simon Watts is running into similar problems to his predecessor James Shaw, who tried for six years to pass a climate change adaptation act," says Newton. The main issue with that failure was around the complexity of how we do it and who pays for it. "This is one of those big thorny issues that if you're changing the rules and changing how people adapt every three or six or nine years, it gives nobody any certainty in the future." Earth Sciences NZ (which is the merger of NIWA with GNS) has done a huge amount of modelling work around the country, mapping coastal inundation risks, and its next body of work due out soon is on inland inundation. Other bodies of work have pointed out that we need spatial planning to avoid destruction by weather in the future. That includes identifying areas of particular risk, and having a plan for them, whether that is creating a wetland or building a sea wall or stop banks, or if a retreat from an area should be mandated. But councils aren't required by legislation to do such work; and if the government puts a cap on rates as it's discussing, it's likely they won't be able to. They just won't have the money. Small councils also have the issue that their planning departments might consist of one or two people, and the job is far bigger than that. As well, specialists who were doing such work have had job cuts - and those experts have gone overseas where their skills are in demand. Check out how to listen to and fol low The Detail here . You can also stay up-to-date by liking us on Facebook or following us on Twitter .

Tasman communities hit by growing trees not slash
Tasman communities hit by growing trees not slash

RNZ News

time4 days ago

  • RNZ News

Tasman communities hit by growing trees not slash

Locals across the Tasman say the flood damage has been worsened by forestry slash. Photo: RNZ/Samuel Rillstone A forestry industry leader says many of the trees that came down in Tasman areas were growing trees that had fallen, not slash. The head of the Forest Owners Association is flying to flood damaged Tasman as it grapples with fallen trees, forestry slash and silt. It appears the forestry industry itself has taken a big hit with thousands of hectares of pine plantation wiped out. The association's chief executive Elizabeth Heeg told Morning Report the forestry industry was open to changing their management operations. "I appreciate in a really hard event, like what we have just been through, that it seems like there should be a way for us to prevent the wood coming down into the communities, and that's something that we are really interested in working with the communities on." But she said there were several areas that weren't active harvesting operations - which produces slash - but rather growing trees that came down. "We are really going to have to look at, with these multiple storm impacts with climate change, how we are going to manage these forests." Trees down in Nelson Tasman, during extensive flooding and heavy rain. Photo: Supplied/ Nick Smith "At this stage what we know about the damage to forestry is that a lot of it has been driven either by landslides that were in standing forestry, we've possibility got some landslides in areas that have been recently replanted, we've also seen a considerable amount of windthrow - that's where the trees snap off at the base - due to the high winds at the end of last week." She said windthrow looked to have impacted "about 4000 hectares" . "It looks like it is going to be a pretty big recovery and clean up operation," she said. "Some of these specific soil types like the Separation Point Granite get saturate and can just give way, including with all the trees that are on top of them. "We've got a lot of work to do from a climate change adaptation perspective." When asked whether forestry should be using that type of soil, Heeg said "some kind of tree cover was going to need to be planted there". She said forestry was open to having a conversation around how they would ensure tree cover was managed in a stable way. Residents across the Tasman region have said forestry slash has exacerbated flood damage. Bethany Park Campground in Kaiteriteri had extensive flood damage. Photo: SAMUEL RILLSTONE / RNZ Nelson Tasman Civil Defence will again be sending a helicopter out on Tuesday to assess and make contact with isolated households. In the region 18 homes remain without power and six people remain in emergency accommodation. Meanwhile, an information drop-in centre has been set up in Motueka to provide support to flood-affected locals . Deputy chair of the Motueka Community Board and co-ordinator for the local business association Love Motueka, Claire Hutt, told Morning Report there were still a lot of people unable to return home. Hutt said about 60 people could not return home - most were staying with friends and family, but some where in the local hotel. Men cutting up and clearing fallen trees in Motueka Valley. Photo: RNZ / Marika Khabazi "Hotel Motueka still got four rooms full of people who had to be evacuated, and yes, some of the streets in the Motueka township have had raw sewage down the street, yeah, it is not very pleasant." She said sewage had become a real problem for the township. "I don't know what they are going to do... [the sewage] has actually been an issue in the past, it's not their first rodeo in that department. We need to start looking at making sure it doesn't happen again as part of the recovery process. "But top priority is getting as much information out to the community so it's all in one place... and also doing welfare checks on people. "A lot of stress tired, people out there and just turning up with a shovel and a smile can make the world of difference." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store