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Spain, Portugal and Greece battle raging wildfires amid grueling heatwave

Spain, Portugal and Greece battle raging wildfires amid grueling heatwave

New York Post2 days ago
Firefighters in Spain, Portugal, and Greece continued to battle wildfires Friday on a public holiday in all three countries as persistent hot, dry conditions challenged efforts to contain the blazes.
Spain was fighting 14 major fires. Temperatures were expected to climb over the weekend.
'Today will once again be a very tough day, with an extreme risk of new fires,' Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez wrote on X.
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9 Local residents react in front of the fire during a wildfire in Santa Baia De Montes, northwestern Spain, Thursday, Aug. 14, 2025.
AP
The national weather agency AEMET warned of extreme fire risk in most of the country, including where the largest blazes were burning in the north and west.
A heatwave, which brought temperatures exceeding 104 Fahrenheit on several days this month, was expected to last through Monday.
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Fires in the Galicia region forced the closure of several highways. The high-speed rail line connecting it to Spain's capital, Madrid, remained suspended.
The fires in Spain this year have burned 610 square miles, according to the European Union's European Forest Fire Information System.
9 Spain was fighting 14 major fires, as temperatures were expected to climb over the weekend.
AP
9 Firefighters in Spain, Portugal, and Greece continued to battle wildfires Friday on a public holiday in all three countries as persistent hot, dry conditions challenged efforts to contain the blazes.
MARIAM A MONTESINOS/EPA/Shutterstock
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That is an area roughly as big as metropolitan London.
In both Spain and Portugal, it was the Feast of the Assumption, a major Catholic holiday usually marked by family gatherings and religious processions.
In Portugal, nearly 4,000 firefighters were battling seven major fires.
9 A wildfire rages near a house in Granja do Paiva, Sernancelhe municipality, Viseu district, Portugal.
PEDRO SARMENTO COSTA/EPA/Shutterstock
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9 In Portugal, nearly 4,000 firefighters were battling seven major fires.
PEDRO SARMENTO COSTA/EPA/Shutterstock
Authorities extended the state of alert until Sunday, amid high temperatures expected to last through the weekend.
A wildfire in Greece burned out of control for a fourth day on the island of Chios, prompting several more overnight evacuations.
Two water-dropping planes and two helicopters were operating in the north of the island in the eastern Aegean Sea, where local authorities said a lull in high winds was helping firefighters early Friday.
9 Volunteer Lifeguards, with a lifeboat, removed families and pets from the Vrachnaeika area in Greece, where the firestorm reached the sea.
Hellenic red cross
9 Overnight evacuations, like the one above, were needed as the wildfire started to burn the island of Chios.
Hellenic red cross
9 Two water-dropping planes and two helicopters were operating in the north of the island in the eastern Aegean Sea.
Gent Shkullaku/ZUMA Press Wire / SplashNews.com
9 Firefighters work to extinguish a wildfire near the city of Patras, western Greece on August 13.
AFP via Getty Images
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Following a series of large fires in western Greece earlier this week, the Fire Service was on alert Friday outside Athens and nearby areas in the south of the country, where adverse weather conditions elevated the fire risk.
The spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, expressed solidarity on Friday with the victims of wildfires in southern Europe during prayers for the Dormition of the Virgin Mary, an important religious holiday for Orthodox Christians.
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Spain deploys 500 more troops to battle wildfires during extended heatwave

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Spain deploys 500 more troops to battle wildfires during extended heatwave

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Millions Across 18 States Told to Stay Out of Sun, Check on Neighbors
Millions Across 18 States Told to Stay Out of Sun, Check on Neighbors

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  • Newsweek

Millions Across 18 States Told to Stay Out of Sun, Check on Neighbors

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‘Real feel' temps are a real joke — don't trust sensational heat-index claims
‘Real feel' temps are a real joke — don't trust sensational heat-index claims

New York Post

time4 hours ago

  • New York Post

‘Real feel' temps are a real joke — don't trust sensational heat-index claims

Every summer, sweltering Americans — myself included — fall for a meteorological scam as we seek information about the day's oppressive heat. That's because the 'feels like' or 'heat index' measurement blaring from our radios or posted on our weather apps isn't a measurement at all. TV meteorologists across the nation trumpet the 'heat index' as a headline number, but in fact it's just a calculated estimate — not something that can be gauged, like air temperature, humidity or barometric pressure. Advertisement Its overuse smacks more of sensationalism than scientific clarity, and plays into a destructive narrative of climate hysteria. The heat index is a formula that did not exist at all until it was developed by the US National Weather Service in 1979. It combines actual air temperature and relative humidity into an approximate 'apparent' temperature — shifting as humidity goes higher or lower. Advertisement The NWS heat-index equation attempts to predict the heat that humans perceive, assuming shaded, low-wind conditions and a generic adult body type — ignoring sunlight, wind, individual physiology, hydration, age, weight, health status and multiple other variables. But it ignores the fact that all individuals experience heat differently: An elderly person or someone with cardiac issues may overheat faster than a young, fit adult, for example. Weathercasters do us a great disservice by inflating the heat index's importance and morphing it into a headline-grabbing marketing tool. Many outlets now forefront the bloated 'feels like' temperature while sidestepping the real air temperature that matters for energy use, infrastructure and actual thermal load. Advertisement Examples of this behavior are too numerous to count. WFLA in Tampa, Fla., recently announced an all-time-high heat index figure as the highest 'ever recorded.' It wasn't recorded at all; it was a calculated estimate. You're increasingly likely to hear predictions like 'today's high will be 104 degrees!' on a humid day when the real thermometer reads 94 degrees Fahrenheit. Advertisement Ginger Zee of 'Good Morning America' last month defended her prominent use of the heat index, calling it 'the most important number that you need to know.' 'We show heat index because that is what a human feels,' she explained. 'If I were forecasting for inanimate objects . . . I would keep it with temperature.' The problem with over-relying on the heat index is that viewers may think the air temperature is 10 or more degrees hotter than it actually is, making it even more difficult to plan outdoor activities, make clothing choices or calculate heating or cooling needs. The fact is, sun exposure, wind and metabolic heat production are often more relevant to how you feel on a hot day — important factors for which the heat index does not account. Worse yet, reporters at outlets such as The Washington Post and Climate Central often seek to link high heat-index values to 'climate change.' But there is no causal link between global climate change and the heat index formula, despite frequent media implications. Climate change isn't driving heat-index estimates — city environments are. We know that urban areas are especially prone to the Urban Heat Island effect, a phenomenon causing cities to be 1 to 7 degrees hotter in the daytime and 2 to 5 degrees warmer at night than surrounding rural zones, due to pavement, buildings, reduced vegetation and anthropogenic heat. Advertisement Mapping efforts by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration have recorded UHI hotspots up to 20 degrees hotter. The UHI effect is not some fringe theory, but a well-documented fact that impacts heat index estimates. The EPA emphasizes that thermal differences in urban areas amplify heat risk far beyond background climate trends — and points out that heat waves and urban surfaces, not just global temperature, are the leading contributors to heat-related health events. Advertisement Lawn irrigation and widespread planting of non-native grasses over the past 50 years have contributed to local humidity rises — boosting heat-index values to the max. Anytime a forecast touts a 'temperature' wildly higher than the recorded official readings from the National Weather Service office, you're likely being misled. If broadcast meteorologists want to serve public understanding, they need to start showing the measured air temperature first and labeling the heat index properly, while educating audiences on the differences between them. Advertisement Let's stop pretending calculated 'feels like' values are real — and start reporting the actual heat, for real. Anthony Watts, a senior fellow for environment and climate at The Heartland Institute, operates the award-winning website

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