logo
Wildfires rip across Spain turning Madrid skies ORANGE as army deployed with fears wild winds will wreak havoc today

Wildfires rip across Spain turning Madrid skies ORANGE as army deployed with fears wild winds will wreak havoc today

The Irish Sun18-07-2025
WILDFIRES are ripping across Spain turning Madrid's skies orange as the army deploys to fight the out of control blazes.
Fears are rising that a dry wind today will fan the flames further and
Advertisement
6
A fire burned about 30miles southwest of Madrid sending black smoke into the sky
Credit: AFP
6
The skies turned red above Madrid
Credit: EscalanteMarisa/x
6
A firefighting plane drops water onto a blaze west of Madrid
Credit: EPA
One blaze sending smoke over Madrid has already burned through 3,000 hectares and is threatening to burn more.
More than 100 firefighters are battling it from the ground and air as officials told dozens of people to leave their homes and evacuate.
Planes and helicopters could be seen dropping huge amounts of water across the hot zone.
Advertisement
The Spanish army deployed its emergency unit - which includes firefighters.
The fire, about 30miles southwest of the capital, broke out on Thursday near the town of Mentrida.
Temperatures reached 37 degrees in Madrid.
The city's civil protection authority advised people to stay indoors and recommended masks to avoid inhaling ash as the gigantic cloud of orange and grey smoke hung over the city.
Advertisement
Most read in The Sun
Exclusive
Exclusive
Officials said on Friday morning that 95 per cent of the fire had been contained by the brave firefighters.
With a reduction in smoke and better visibility, transport authorities have also been happy to open nearby roads.
Tomorrowland chaos after huge fire breaks out on main stage a DAY before festival is due to start
But officials are now worried that firefighters could lose control the blaze again due to the wind forecast.
Temps are forecast to reach 34 degrees today in the city, but gusts of up to 39mph could fan the flames further.
Advertisement
Large parts of eastern Spain are under heat and fire warnings running from the Pyrenees down to the southern coast.
The mayor of Méntrida, Alfonso Arriero, said firefighters near the blaze were trying to stop it from sparking back up.
He said: "We're using all available resources in case the wind changes direction or a flare-up flares up again.
6
Firefighters battled the blaze late into the night
Credit: Reuters
Advertisement
6
They managed to get it 95 per cent under control but officials have warned it could get worse Friday
Credit: Reuters
"But right now, we're calm about that, but at the same time, we're quite concerned about what's happening and how it doesn't flare up again."
The cause of the fire is unknown.
Last week, Spanish authorities ordered nearly 20,000 people to stay indoors due to smoke in Catalonia after one blaze burned 3,000 hectares.
Advertisement
Two died in a separate wildfire in the same region on July 1.
It comes after a
Plumes of dark smoke could be seen hanging over rows of houses in the East London area while grass could be seen burning away.
Read more on the Irish Sun
And Tomorrowland bosses have pledged to build a new main stage in time for this weekend's festival after the original burned down.
Advertisement
Years of creativity and craftsmanship had gone into building the main stage set piece but the whole lot went up in flames on Wednesday.
6
The fire burned only 30miles from Madrid
Credit: X/112cmadrid
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Huge wildfires spreads across Athens and two popular Greek islands as thousands are evacuated
Huge wildfires spreads across Athens and two popular Greek islands as thousands are evacuated

The Irish Sun

timea day ago

  • The Irish Sun

Huge wildfires spreads across Athens and two popular Greek islands as thousands are evacuated

MASSIVE wildfires have erupted in Greece after a week-long heatwave peaked with temperatures surpassing 45 degrees. Thousands of people have reportedly been evacuated as fires swept villages near 9 Smoke and flame rise as firefighting teams respond from the air and on the ground to a forest fire that broke out in Krioneri near Athens, Greece Credit: Getty 9 Firefighters try to extinguish flames as a wildfire burns Credit: Reuters 9 Local residents try to extinguish the fire of a burning house during a wildfire near Athens Credit: AFP A Residents of the town of Kryoneri, some 12 miles northeast of Athens, received three SMS messages to evacuate to safe areas. While residents of the nearby village of Krioneri were instructed by authorities to evacuate. Explosions could be heard as huge clouds of smoke covered Drosopigi village, 15 miles north of Athens, where factories with flammable material are located. more on wildfires Helicopters dropped water, and 65 firefighters battled the flames, assisted by 26 vehicles and two aircraft. Fire service is also dealing with three other major fires in the southwest of Greece's two largest islands, Crete in the south and Evia. At least 335 firefighters, 19 planes and 13 helicopters are involved, but can only operate in daylight, authorities revealed. In total, 52 wildfires broke out across the country over the past 24 hours, a spokesman for the fire department said. Most read in The US Sun Strong winds are causing the fire to spread rapidly and prompting evacuations of several settlements . On the island of Evia, 115 firefighters and 24 vehicles were deployed to put out fires, assisted by six aircraft and seven helicopters, but strong winds were hampering their efforts. Moment Brit expats tour smouldering shell of Cyprus home they fled as deadly wildfires hit Residents of the island's Triada area were told to be ready in case they needed to leave. The fire on Evia is the latest in a series of bushfires stoked by strong winds and dry conditions this month. On the island of Kythera, authorities evacuated the villages of Aroniadika, Pitsinades and Aryoi. In the area of Messinia, west of Athens, residents of the Kryoneri and Sellas villages were also told to leave. These sites were on a list of Greek regions on high alert for wildfires due to record-breaking temperatures and strong winds due on Saturday. Temperatures in Greece were forecast to reach up to 44 degrees Celsius on Saturday, the Greek weather service said. Wildfires, many of them destructive, Several Greece and other Mediterranean countries are in an area dubbed "a wildfire hotspot" by scientists, with blazes common during hot and dry summers. 9 Smoke and flame rise as firefighting teams respond from the air and on the ground to a forest fire that broke out in Krioneri near Athens Credit: Getty 9 A forest fire that broke out in Krioneri near Athens, Greece on July 26, 2025 Credit: Getty 9 A helicopter drops water on a burning house during a wildfire in Kryoneri Credit: AFP 9 Smoke covers the sky during a wildfire, in the northwestern suburb of Kryoneri Credit: AP These have become more destructive in recent years. Some 1,500 people were The night sky turned orange as the burning blazes left a trail of destruction on the popular island. Evacuations were ordered at three sites outside the port of Ierapetra on the island's south coast, authorities said. Meanwhile, devastating wildfires have again erupted in Turkey, with hundreds of people evacuated as massive blazes continue to rip through the country. Presidetn Recep Tayyip Erdoğan warned of a "truly great disaster" after at least New wildfires broke out on Turkey's Mediterranean coast on Friday, as the government declared two western provinces in the country to be "disaster zones". East of Antalya, fires broke out in Adana and Mersin on Friday. Elsewhere in the country, firefighters continued battling blazes in Eskisehir and nearby Karabuk that have been raging for several days. Meanwhile, Cyprus has been hit with its heatwave will fuel the blaze even further. The country has plunged into chaos after two people were burnt alive and more than 70 houses were destroyed. 9 A wildfire rages across a forested area near Cavuslar village, in Karabuk district, northwest Turkey Credit: AP 9 A view of smoke rising from a forest fire burning in the mountainous area in Turkey Credit: Getty

Dozens killed as flash floods and landslides rip through the Philippines after fierce tropical storms
Dozens killed as flash floods and landslides rip through the Philippines after fierce tropical storms

The Irish Sun

time2 days ago

  • The Irish Sun

Dozens killed as flash floods and landslides rip through the Philippines after fierce tropical storms

AT least 25 people have been killed and nearly 300,000 evacuated as storms batter the Philippines. A new tropical storm struck on Thursday night, unleashing winds up to 74 miles per hour and triggering devastating floods and landslides. Advertisement 4 People wade through a flooded road in Malabon city in northern Philippines Credit: AP 4 Homes in Calumpit left underwater after monsoon rains and Typhoon Co-may struck the Philippines Credit: Reuters 4 A woman carries a baby as they wade through floods in Manila Credit: Reuters Typhoon Co-may struck the mountainous northern town of Agno, in Pangasinan province, as it swept through the Philippines on Thursday night. At least 25 people have died from flash floods, landslides and electrocution since last weekend, officials say, with eight more reported missing. Seasonal monsoon rains have pounded a vast stretch of the country for over a week. And more than a dozen tropical storms are forecast to hit the Southeast Asian country before the end of the year. Advertisement Read more world news Schools in the capital, Manila, were closed on Friday for the third day in a row. Classes were also suspended in 35 provinces across Luzon - the northern part of the country - where most of the 80 towns and cities that have declared a state of calamity are located. 278,000 people have been forced to seek refuge in emergency shelters or with relatives. Nearly 3,000 homes have been damaged, according to the government's disaster response agency. Advertisement Most read in The US Sun Thousands of troops, police officers, coast guards, firefighters and volunteers have been rushed in to rescue stranded residents. The US has pledged to provide military aircraft to help transport food and other aid if weather conditions worsen. Heartbreaking vids show kids having fun at Camp Mystic - before singing through sobs & tears as they flee deadly floods Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. visited emergency shelters in Rizal province on Thursday to help distribute food. He called an emergency meeting with disaster-response chiefs, warning that both the government and public must brace for more frequent and unpredictable natural disasters thanks to climate change. Advertisement The Philippines faces about 20 typhoons and storms every year - most hitting the poorest regions of the country. By Friday afternoon, the typhoon had moved northeast and weakened slightly. It comes as flash floods tore through central Texas in early July, killing 135 people in a tragedy that shook Texas to its core. Among the victims were children as young as eight, attending a summer camp. Advertisement At least 27 campers and members of staff from Camp Mystic died. The floods claimed more lives than Hurricane Harvey - the Category 4 storm that devastated Texas in 2017 and killed 107 people. 4 A pedicab driver cycles through a flooded street in Manila Credit: Reuters

At least 12 killed in wildfires across Turkey and Cyprus as heat soars
At least 12 killed in wildfires across Turkey and Cyprus as heat soars

Irish Times

time3 days ago

  • Irish Times

At least 12 killed in wildfires across Turkey and Cyprus as heat soars

Wildfires fuelled by soaring temperatures and strong winds across the eastern Mediterranean have left a dozen people dead in Turkey and Cyprus . Ten forest workers and search and rescue volunteers were killed in Turkey's Eskisehir province and 14 others were hospitalised on Wednesday after being trapped by flames driven by rapidly shifting winds, Anadolu Agency reported. Two people died in Cyprus, where authorities ordered evacuations after about 100 homes were burned. Turkey's agriculture & forestry minister Ibrahim Yumakli warned of extremely dangerous conditions as a blast of Saharan air fuels a heatwave that has seen temperatures reach 50 degrees in southeastern provinces. Nine big wildfires ignited on Wednesday alone. READ MORE A burnt sign near the Cypriot village of Vouni, in the Limassol province, on Thursday. Photograph: Etienne Torbey/AFP via Getty Images Wildfires have always affected the Mediterranean, but they have become a near constant summer threat as climate change creates more extreme weather patterns. A string of heatwaves across Europe – the world's fastest-warming continent – have temporarily shut down tourist attractions like the Eiffel Tower and the Acropolis this summer, while disrupting transport and threatening the health of millions of vulnerable people. In Cyprus, a blaze broke out in the Limassol district in the south of the island on Wednesday. Spain has sent two firefighting planes to help Cyprus, while Jordan is also providing assistance. About 100 square kilometres have so far been burnt and more than a dozen aircraft will soon be assisting firefighters in bringing flare-ups in forest areas under control, fire service spokesman Andreas Kettis told state-run Cyprus News Agency. An aerial view of burnt houses in the Cypriot village of Souni, Limassol province. Photograph: Etienne Torbey/AFP Two people were found dead in a burnt-out vehicle, trapped by the fire. At least 10 people were injured, two of them seriously, police said. Authorities said it was too early to give a precise account of damage, or what started the fire. 'We are talking about very strong winds, with gusts, which were constantly interchanging,' Mr Kettis said. Highs in inland Cyprus were forecast to climb to 44 degrees on Thursday. Fire risk will also increase across Greece, with strong northerly winds forecast on Friday and Saturday and temperatures of as high as 44 degrees. Weather warnings are being escalated, while night-time lows in cities will remain at up to 29 degrees. Human development patterns and land use changes are putting more people at risk from wildfires, said Christophe Neff, a senior researcher at Germany's Karlsruhe Institute of Technology and expert in the region's fire ecology. [ Cyprus wildfires: 'We'll no longer have this paradise' Opens in new window ] 'Climate change will not only affect wildfire dynamics in Mediterranean ecosystems but also transform many regions in Europe into wildfire risk landscapes,' he said. Heat and wildfire warnings have also been issued further north, in Finland and Norway. Alerts are also in place across the Iberian Peninsula and much of southeastern Europe, but a change in weather patterns is forecast to bring some relief by early August. That change is already impacting northwest Europe, with 14 French regions, including Paris, covered by amber warnings for thunderstorms and floods. Rainfall of as much as 80 millimetres could impact some grain and wine-growing regions, with hail also hitting vines around Sancerre, according to Ici radio. – Bloomberg and Reuters

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