'Climate change affects everyone': Europe battles wildfires in intense
heat
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[July 18, 2022]
By Guillermo Martinez
JERTE, Spain (Reuters) -Authorities across
southern Europe battled on Sunday to control huge wildfires in countries
including Spain, Greece and France, with hundreds of deaths blamed on
soaring temperatures that scientists say are consistent with climate
change.
In Spain, helicopters dropped water on the flames as heat above 40
Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) and often mountainous terrain made the job
harder for firefighters.
Shocked residents watching thick plumes of smoke rising above the
central western Jerte valley said the heat was making their previously
green and cool home more like Spain's semi-arid south.
"Climate change affects everyone," said resident Miguel Angel Tamayo.
A study published in June in the journal 'Environmental Research:
Climate' concluded it was highly probable that climate change was making
heatwaves worse.
More than 1,000 deaths have been attributed to the nearly week-long
heatwave in Portugal and Spain so far. Temperatures in Spain have
reached as high as 45.7C (114F).
Spain's weather agency issued temperature warnings for Sunday, with
highs of 42 Celsius (108 Fahrenheit) forecast in Aragon, Navarra and La
Rioja, in the north. It said the heatwave would end on Monday, but
warned temperatures would remain "abnormally high".
Fires were raging in several other regions including Castille and Leon
in central Spain and Galicia in the north on Sunday afternoon.
Firefighters stabilised a blaze in Mijas, in Malaga province, and said
evacuated people could return home.
British pensioners William and Ellen McCurdy had fled for safety with
other evacuees in a local sport centre from their home on Saturday as
the fire approached.
"It was very fast .... I didn’t take it too seriously. I thought they
had it under control and I was quite surprised when it seemed to be
moving in our direction," William, 68, told Reuters.
In France, wildfires have now spread over 11,000 hectares (27,000 acres)
in the southwestern region of Gironde, and more than 14,000 people have
been evacuated, regional authorities said on Sunday afternoon.
More than 1,200 firefighters were trying to control the blazes, the
authorities said in a statement.
France issued red alerts, the highest possible, for several regions,
with residents urged "to be extremely vigilant".
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Firefighters work to contain a tactical fire in Louchats, as
wildfires continue to spread in the Gironde region of southwestern
France, July 17, 2022. REUTERS/Sarah Meyssonnier
In Italy, where smaller fires have blazed in recent
days, forecasters expect temperatures above 40C in several regions
in coming days.
Similar temperatures were recorded in Portugal on Sunday and are
forecast in Britain on Monday and Tuesday, in what would top its
previous official record of 38.7C (102F) set in Cambridge in 2019.
Britain's national weather forecaster issued its first red "extreme
heat" warning for parts of England. Rail passengers were advised to
only travel if absolutely necessary and to expect widespread delays
and cancellations.
DROUGHT IN PORTUGAL
Around 1,000 firefighters tried to control 13 forest and rural fires
in the centre and north of Portugal, the largest being near the
northern city of Chaves.
Portugal's Health Ministry said late on Saturday that in the last
seven days 659 people died due to the heatwave, most of them
elderly. It said the weekly peak of 440 deaths was on Thursday, when
temperatures exceeded 40C (104F) in several regions and 47C (117F)
at a meteorological station in the district of Vizeu in the centre
of the country.
By Saturday, there were 360 heat-related deaths in Spain, according
to figures from the Carlos III Health Institute.
Portugal was grappling with extreme drought even before the recent
heatwave, according to data from the national meteorological
institute. Some 96% of the mainland was already suffering severe or
extreme drought at the end of June.
Emergency and Civil Protection Authority Commander Andre Fernandes
urged people to take care not to ignite new fires in such bone-dry
conditions.
In Greece the fire brigade said on Saturday 71 blazes had broken out
within a 24-hour period.
(Reporting by Guillermo Martinez, Layli Foroudi, Sergio Goncalves,
Jessica Jones, Renee Maltezou, Jon Nazca and Mariano
ValladolidWriting by Raissa Kasolowsky, Frances Kerry and Frank Jack
DanielEditing by Mark Potter, Philippa Fletcher and Gareth Jones)
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