
3 dead, thousands evacuate as huge wildfires, heatwave hit Europe
Three men died.
About 2 000 people were evacuated from hotels and homes in Spain.
Three men died and thousands were forced from their homes on Tuesday as wildfires fuelled by a heatwave scorched southern Europe.
Heat alerts were issued in Italy, France, Spain, Portugal and the Balkans, with temperatures expected to soar above 40°C.
The heatwave is another sign of climate change, which is fuelling longer, more intense and increasingly frequent bouts of extreme heat.
'Thanks to climate change, we now live in a significantly warmer world,' Akshay Deoras, a research scientist at the meteorology department in Britain's University of Reading told AFP, adding that 'many still underestimate the danger'.
An employee of a Spanish equestrian centre died from his injuries in Tres Cantos, a wealthy suburb north of Madrid, officials said - reportedly as he tried to save horses.
READ | Fire sparks drama one day before Belgium's epic Tomorrowland electro festival
Later, officials in Castile and Leon in northwestern Spain confirmed another man had been killed while fighting fires.
Eduardo Sanz/Europa Press via Getty Images
And a soldier in the Balkan country of Montenegro died and another was seriously injured when their water tanker overturned while fighting wildfires in the hills north of the capital, Podgorica.
A child died of heatstroke in Italy on Monday.
The equestrian centre employee was the first fatality from dozens of wildfires that have hit Spain since a heatwave began last week.
Hundreds of residents of Tres Cantos fled from the fast-moving blaze, which was contained on Tuesday morning.
Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez said on X that rescue services were 'working tirelessly to extinguish the fires'.
We are at extreme risk of forest fires. Please be very cautious.
Pedro Sanchez
Elsewhere, about 2 000 people were evacuated from hotels and homes near the popular beaches of Tarifa in Andalusia, southern Spain.
The wildfire broke out near where a similar blaze forced evacuations earlier this month.
'We managed to save the residential area at the very last second,' said Antonio Sanz, the Andalusia region's interior minister.
In Castile and Leon, dozens of blazes were reported, including one threatening Las Medulas, a UNESCO World Heritage site known for its ancient Roman gold mines.
Ahmet Abbasi/Anadolu via Getty Images
The head of the regional government of Castile and Leon, Alfonso Fernandez Manueco, vowed 'to act quickly and generously' once the fire is over to restore the site 'to its full glory as soon as possible'.
In neighbouring Portugal, firefighters battled three large wildfires, with the most serious near Trancoso in the centre of the country.
More than 700 firefighters were deployed there.
Church bells rang out on Tuesday morning in Mendo Gordo, a hamlet near Trancoso, to sound the alarm as a thick column of smoke rose in the distance, images broadcast on Portuguese television showed.
Smoke and greenhouse gas emissions related to forest fires since the beginning of summer in the Northern Hemisphere are among the highest ever recorded, according to the EU climate monitor Copernicus.
Rusmin Radic/Anadolu via Getty Images
Temperature records were broken at four weather stations in southern France on Monday and three-quarters of the country was under heat alerts on Tuesday, with temperatures forecast to top 40°C in the Rhone Valley.
The Rhone department banned outdoor public events.
Temperatures started rising on Friday in France's second heatwave in just a few weeks and could remain high into next week, according to the national weather office Meteo-France.
That would make it a 12- to 14-day stretch of extreme heat.
'It's already too hot,' said Alain Bichot, 34, as he sat at a café terrace early on Tuesday morning in Dijon in eastern France.
'I would rather just go to the office. At least there is air conditioning there.'
Eleven Italian cities, including Rome, Milan and Florence, were placed on red alert on Tuesday due to the heat.
In Montenegro, fire crews aided by military personnel were fighting a blaze around Podgorica for a second day when the water truck flipped, killing the soldier, the defence ministry said in a statement.
Authorities warned residents to stay indoors due to smoke from a forest fire raging in the hills above Podgorica.
Hundreds of soldiers and firefighters were also battling wildfires in Albania, while Greece has requested EU assistance to battle more than 100 wildfires stoked by fierce winds and dry conditions on its territory.
Athens has requested four water bombers from the EU Civil Protection Mechanism after evacuating 20 villages in the Achaia region.
More than half (52%) of Europe and the Mediterranean basin was hit by drought in July for the fourth consecutive month, according to an AFP analysis of European Drought Observatory (EDO) data.
Drought levels in the region are the highest on record for the month of July since data collection began in 2012, exceeding the 2012-2024 average by 21%.
Hashtags

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


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Climate change is making things even worse for the poorly housed
Climate change is making Hong Kong's summers hotter. Yet tens of thousands of residents remain sardined into homes smaller than a parking space, where staying cool is a luxury few can afford as the climate warms. In small, enclosed spaces with little ventilation or cooling, indoor temperatures can soar past 100°F (37.7°C), posing serious health risks for the city's most vulnerable.


CNN
an hour ago
- CNN
Climate change is making things even worse for the poorly housed
Climate change is making Hong Kong's summers hotter. Yet tens of thousands of residents remain sardined into homes smaller than a parking space, where staying cool is a luxury few can afford as the climate warms. In small, enclosed spaces with little ventilation or cooling, indoor temperatures can soar past 100°F (37.7°C), posing serious health risks for the city's most vulnerable.


New York Times
2 hours ago
- New York Times
Spain's Old Ways May Show How to Keep Cool
Javier Recio held a lawn chair like a parasol over his mother's head. The two had given up on sitting outside and were walking home through one of the least green, and most sweltering, neighborhoods of Seville. A pharmacy sign posted a temperature above 100 degrees Fahrenheit, and a drinking fountain trickled scorching water. 'We need to do something,' said Mr. Recio, 48. In August, deadly wildfires forced the evacuation of thousands of people in northern and southern Spain and damaged a Roman-era mining site on the UNESCO world heritage list. Temperatures cracked 111 degrees Fahrenheit (44 Celsius), and Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez warned the country, 'We're at extreme risk.' Throughout this long and miserable summer, Seville, in the country's south, has become a furnace of southern Europe. Its residents hope for some relief from increasingly frequent and intense heat waves that threaten the most vulnerable. But the city, like everywhere else, has no quick fix for the disastrous consequences of a warming planet and is hardly on the cusp of futuristic breakthrough. Plans for a single cooling bus stop are still in the works. What the city does have is a deep history of sweating it out with common-sense coping mechanisms. The traditional siesta is no accident. As places like Norway and Finland hit higher temperatures, an increasingly uncomfortable continent may find itself looking to Seville and other cities that have been living with the heat for centuries for ways to get through what feels like the perpetual inferno of summer. Santiponce MACARENA Guadalquivir R. Plaza de la Encarnación Ginés Seville A-49 A-49 Plaza de España SPAIN A-4 A-4 PORTUGAL Madrid Brenes Seville 2 mileS By The New York Times Want all of The Times? Subscribe.