
Portugal follows Spain and requests firefighting help from EU nations
Madrid (dpa) Two firefighting planes from Sweden are expected to arrive on Sunday in Portugal after Lisbon requested support to fight large wildfires from its EU partners, the state broadcaster RTP reported on Saturday.The request follows one made by neighbouring Spain and falls under the EU disaster protection mechanism. Around 3,500 firefighters are battling 10 major fires in Portugal. On Friday, the first fatality was reported. A volunteer lost his life in the flames in the municipality of Guarda in the north-west of the country, according to authorities. In both countries, media reported despair and anger among those affected, who criticized the state for insufficient preparation and inadequate assistance.
August: A month of fire Portugal and Spain have not experienced such severe and uncontrollable forest and vegetation fires in years. The situation has escalated dramatically in August. According to the Portuguese Institute for Forestry, 139,000 hectares of vegetation have been destroyed in Portugal since the beginning of the year, with 64,000 hectares burned in just the past two days. In Spain, the European Forest Fire Information System (Effis) estimates that around 157,000 hectares have been destroyed since the start of the year, with about half of that occurring in August. On Saturday alone, 19 wildfires were raging in north-west Spain, large or dangerous enough to require affected regions to request help from the central government, the state broadcaster RTVE reported. After France sent two firefighting planes in response to a request from Madrid, two more aircraft from Italy were expected.
Village in Spain partially destroyed In both countries, the heatwave that has lasted nearly two weeks is taking a toll on people and nature. Heat warnings were in place across much of Spain on Saturday, with peak temperatures of up to 43 degrees Celsius expected in some areas in the afternoon.There was no sign of rain. Fires continued to flare up, and dry, hot winds that frequently changed direction reignited blazes that had already been brought under control. The village of Palacios de Jamuz in the Spanish province of León was partially destroyed, as shown in a video.The increasingly frequent and prolonged heatwaves caused by climate change, which dry out vegetation and soil, are not the sole reason for the intensifying fires. Forest and scrubland areas in Spain have expanded from 12 million hectares to 27 million hectares over the past 50 years, RTVE reported.
Compounding the problem is that forests are increasingly unused in areas experiencing significant rural depopulation, leading to the accumulation of vast amounts of flammable material.

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Al Etihad
a day ago
- Al Etihad
Portugal follows Spain and requests firefighting help from EU nations
16 Aug 2025 19:08 Madrid (dpa) Two firefighting planes from Sweden are expected to arrive on Sunday in Portugal after Lisbon requested support to fight large wildfires from its EU partners, the state broadcaster RTP reported on request follows one made by neighbouring Spain and falls under the EU disaster protection mechanism. Around 3,500 firefighters are battling 10 major fires in Portugal. On Friday, the first fatality was reported. A volunteer lost his life in the flames in the municipality of Guarda in the north-west of the country, according to authorities. In both countries, media reported despair and anger among those affected, who criticized the state for insufficient preparation and inadequate assistance. August: A month of fire Portugal and Spain have not experienced such severe and uncontrollable forest and vegetation fires in years. The situation has escalated dramatically in August. According to the Portuguese Institute for Forestry, 139,000 hectares of vegetation have been destroyed in Portugal since the beginning of the year, with 64,000 hectares burned in just the past two days. In Spain, the European Forest Fire Information System (Effis) estimates that around 157,000 hectares have been destroyed since the start of the year, with about half of that occurring in August. On Saturday alone, 19 wildfires were raging in north-west Spain, large or dangerous enough to require affected regions to request help from the central government, the state broadcaster RTVE reported. After France sent two firefighting planes in response to a request from Madrid, two more aircraft from Italy were expected. Village in Spain partially destroyed In both countries, the heatwave that has lasted nearly two weeks is taking a toll on people and nature. Heat warnings were in place across much of Spain on Saturday, with peak temperatures of up to 43 degrees Celsius expected in some areas in the was no sign of rain. Fires continued to flare up, and dry, hot winds that frequently changed direction reignited blazes that had already been brought under control. The village of Palacios de Jamuz in the Spanish province of León was partially destroyed, as shown in a increasingly frequent and prolonged heatwaves caused by climate change, which dry out vegetation and soil, are not the sole reason for the intensifying fires. Forest and scrubland areas in Spain have expanded from 12 million hectares to 27 million hectares over the past 50 years, RTVE reported. Compounding the problem is that forests are increasingly unused in areas experiencing significant rural depopulation, leading to the accumulation of vast amounts of flammable material.


Dubai Eye
a day ago
- Dubai Eye
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
2 days ago
- Al Etihad
At least 16 major forest fires raging in Spain
15 Aug 2025 20:34 Madrid (dpa) Firefighters in Spain continued to battle major forest fires in at least 16 locations on Friday, as the country reels from one of its most devastating summers yet, according to the Interior of smaller blazes are also raging in several regions, the ministry Minister Fernando Grande-Marlaska said the state would provide all necessary means to fight the flames, in comments to state broadcaster danger of further forest fires remains high due to the ongoing heat and drought, he have destroyed 157,000 hectares of forest and bushland in Spain since the start of the year, according to official estimates, with 115,000 hectares burnt in August alone so least 12,000 people have been evacuated from their homes in the hard-hit regions of Castilla y León, Galicia and Extremadura, with the worst fires raging in the relatively sparsely populated north-west of the country. Meanwhile, firefighters continue to try to bring the largest forest fire ever recorded in Spain under control, which has already destroyed some 38,000 hectares in the Zamora region. Three firefighters have been killed this month while battling the flames. Many emergency forces are said to be exhausted after being deployed for up to 20 hours on fires have sparked a dispute between the government and the opposition camp, with both sides accusing each other of having failed to ensure sufficient preparation and equipment for some affected citizens have been complaining about a lack of support, with videos circulating online showing residents trying to save their homes from the flames using garden addition to climate change, experts cited by Spanish media attributed the intensity of the fires to the rural exodus of the past decades, which they said had fuelled the spread of vegetation which the flames were feeding leader Alberto Núñez Feijóo has called for a larger military contingent to be deployed to help fight the fires, after a special military firefighting unit was sent in a few days ago. Grande-Marlaska assured the affected regions that all necessary assistance would be provided, after he had previously requested help from the European Union, leading France to send two firefighting planes.