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FIREBALLS hit Spain as wildfires spark freak 'fire whirls' and reach Madrid, killing one person as Europe's heatwave hell continues
FIREBALLS hit Spain as wildfires spark freak 'fire whirls' and reach Madrid, killing one person as Europe's heatwave hell continues

Daily Mail​

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • Daily Mail​

FIREBALLS hit Spain as wildfires spark freak 'fire whirls' and reach Madrid, killing one person as Europe's heatwave hell continues

Extreme heat and strong winds in Spain caused 'fire whirls' on Monday night, as a hellish blaze burned several houses and forced the evacuation of hundreds of people, killing one person in the capital. Firefighters have managed to contain a wildfire in the Tres Cantos suburb, northeast of Madrid, after 180 people were evacuated overnight. A man who had been taken by helicopter to the La Paz hospital after suffering burns on 98 percent of his body, later died, the Community of Madrid said this morning. The fire ripped through more than 1,000 hectares. Elsewhere in Spain, wildfires sparked by infernal temperatures in the north of the country prompted the evacuation of hundreds of people near a UNESCO-listed national park. About 800 people were told to abandon their homes in half a dozen villages in the north of the Castile and Leon region, where several wildfires were raging. Residents of the town of Congosta were spraying houses, trees and pavement with their garden hoses to fend off the flames that devoured at least two buildings, while police told them to prepare for evacuatio The smoke was too thick for firefighting aircraft to deploy. 'There are already several houses that have burned down, we don't know what to do anymore. We're completely defenceless and have been abandoned,' said Congosta resident Evangelina Peral Delgado, 70. High temperatures on Sunday had caused the so-called fire whirls near Las Medulas park, forcing firemen to retreat said Juan Carlos Suarez-Quinones, chief of environment for the regional government. 'This occurs when temperatures reach around 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in a very confined valley and then suddenly (the fire) enters a more open and oxygenated area. This produces a fireball, a fire whirl,' he said. Scientists say the Mediterranean region's hotter, drier summers put it at high risk of wildfires. Once fires start, dry vegetation and strong winds can cause them to spread rapidly and burn out of control, sometimes provoking fire whirls. A prolonged heatwave in Spain continued on Monday with temperatures set to reach 42C in some regions. Domingo Aparicio, 77, was evacuated to a nearby town from his home in Cubo de Benavente on Sunday after a warehouse in front of his home burned down. 'How am I supposed to feel? It's always shocking for people close to the catastrophe,' he said. Two or three fires may have been started by lightning strikes, Suarez-Quinones said, but there were indications that the majority were the result of arson, which he described as 'environmental terrorism'. In the northern part of neighbouring Portugal, nearly 700 firefighters were battling a blaze that started on Saturday in Trancoso, some 200 miles northeast of Lisbon. So far this year about 200 square miles or 0.6 percent of Portugal's total area, have burned, exceeding the 2006-2024 average for the same period by about 10,000 hectares, according to the European Forest Fire Information System. Firefighters were also battling blazes in Navarra in northeastern Spain and in Huelva in the southwest, authorities said.

Wildfires threaten Madrid as blazes rage across Spain
Wildfires threaten Madrid as blazes rage across Spain

Telegraph

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • Telegraph

Wildfires threaten Madrid as blazes rage across Spain

A wildfire has broken out in a town near Madrid as Europe continues to grapple with extreme heat. Emergency crews battled the blaze in Tres Cantos overnight, which is located some 23km north of the Spanish capital. Extreme temperatures in southern Europe, including Spain and Portugal, are expected to last until at least Wednesday, with forecasts reaching up to 44C. Firefighters were also tackling 'fire whirls' in the north of Spain, which burned several houses and forced hundreds of residents from their homes. About 800 people were told to abandon their homes in half a dozen villages in the Castile and Leon region, where several wildfires were raging. High temperatures on Sunday had already caused a separate wildfire near Las Medulas park, forcing firemen to retreat. 'This occurs when temperatures reach around 40C in a very confined valley and then suddenly (the fire) enters a more open and oxygenated area. This produces a fireball, a fire whirl,' said Juan Carlos Suarez-Quinones, the chief of environment for the regional government. Scientists say the Mediterranean's hotter, drier summers put it at high risk of wildfires. Once fires start, dry vegetation and strong winds can cause them to spread rapidly and burn out of control, sometimes provoking fire whirls. A prolonged heatwave in Spain continued on Monday with temperatures set to reach 42C in some regions on Tuesday. In the northern part of neighbouring Portugal, nearly 700 firefighters were battling a blaze that started on Saturday in Trancoso, some 350km (200 miles) north-east of Lisbon. Meanwhile, temperatures are expected to reach 40C in Italy this week, where a four-year-old boy died from heatstroke. Red alert warnings have been issued for seven major cities, including Bologna and Florence. In France, nearly half the country was placed under heatwave warnings as of Monday, with 12.5 per cent of its administrative units on the highest red alert. It came after firefighters brought its biggest fire since 1949 under control on Sunday, which killed at least one person and injured 20 firefighters and five civilians. Wildfires in Croatia, Serbia, Albania and Montenegro have also forced people to flee their homes, according to local media reports. The UK has been spared from extreme heat this summer, though the country's hottest ever temperature of 40.3C was recorded just a few years ago at Coningsby, Lincolnshire on July 19, 2022. Temperatures in the UK are also hotter than average, with amber alerts issued as temperatures may hit 34C during what will be the fourth heatwave of the summer. However, while the UK is experiencing a hotter-than-average summer, its cooler, wetter Atlantic-influenced climate and the positioning of pressure systems prevent it from reaching the extreme temperatures experienced in southern Europe.

Crews fight 'fire whirls' and extreme heat in northern Spain
Crews fight 'fire whirls' and extreme heat in northern Spain

CBC

time5 days ago

  • Climate
  • CBC

Crews fight 'fire whirls' and extreme heat in northern Spain

High heat and strong winds cause 'fire whirls' in Spain 40 minutes ago Duration 1:18 Social Sharing Extreme heat and strong winds caused "fire whirls" as a blaze burned several houses and forced the evacuation of hundreds of people from near a UNESCO-listed national park in northern Spain, authorities said on Monday. About 800 people were told to abandon their homes in half a dozen villages in the north of the Castile and Leon region, where several wildfires were raging. Residents of the town of Congosta were spraying houses, trees and pavement with their garden hoses to fend off the flames that devoured at least two buildings, while police told them to prepare for evacuation. The smoke was too thick for firefighting aircraft to deploy. "There are already several houses that have burned down, we don't know what to do anymore. We're completely defenceless and have been abandoned," said Congosta resident Evangelina Peral Delgado, 70. High temperatures on Sunday had caused the fire whirls near Las Medulas park, forcing firefighters to retreat, said Juan Carlos Suarez-Quinones, chief of environment for the regional government. "This occurs when temperatures reach around 40 C in a very confined valley, and then suddenly [the fire] enters a more open and oxygenated area. This produces a fireball, a fire whirl." Scientists say the Mediterranean region's hotter, drier summers put it at high risk of wildfires. Once fires start, dry vegetation and strong winds can cause them to spread rapidly and burn out of control, sometimes provoking fire whirls. A prolonged heatwave in Spain continued on Monday, with temperatures set to reach 42 C in some regions. Domingo Aparicio, 77, was evacuated to a nearby town from his home in Cubo de Benavente on Sunday after a warehouse in front of his home burned down. "How am I supposed to feel?" he said. "It's always shocking for people close to the catastrophe." Two or three fires may have been started by lightning strikes, Suarez-Quinones said, but there were indications that the majority were the result of arson, which he described as "environmental terrorism." In the northern part of neighbouring Portugal, nearly 700 firefighters were battling a blaze that started on Saturday in Trancoso, some 350 kilometres northeast of Lisbon. So far this year about 52,000 hectares, or 0.6 per cent of Portugal's total area, have burned, exceeding the 2006-2024 average for the same period by about 10,000 hectares, according to the European Forest Fire Information System.

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