Portugal battles forest fires amid heatwave


Firefighters battle a fire in Cruzinha, Alvaiazere, Portugal, July 10, 2022. The government has implemented a ‘state of contingency’. – EPA pic, July 11, 2022.

AROUND 2,800 firefighters battled multiple wildfires in central and northern Portugal yesterday amid a heatwave, prompting the government to implement a “state of contingency”.

The fires have been burning in several areas since Thursday, destroying at least two homes. Nearly 250 fires were reported to have started on Friday and Saturday. 

The blazes come amid an intense heatwave in Portugal, with temperatures reaching above 40 degrees Celsius this week and expected to rise in the coming days. 

Scientists said extreme weather events such as heatwaves and droughts are linked to climate change. They are expected to become even more frequent, more prolonged and more intense in the future.

Yesterday the Portuguese government issued a national “state of contingency”, which puts rescue services on alert. It is above state of alert but beneath state of calamity and state of emergency. 

The Civil Protection Agency said some 1,500 firefighters were battling blazes in Ourem, Pombal and Carrazeda de Ansiaes municipalities.

“The fire got 50m from the last house in the village,” pensioner Donzilia Marques, from the hamlet of Travessa de Almogadel in central Portugal, told AFP.

“Up there everything burned,” the 76-year-old said, pointing to the hills between her home and the town of Freixianda. 

More than 700 soldiers were dispatched to the area yesterday after the fires destroyed an estimated 1,500ha of vegetation, the agency said. 

The fires have injured around 40 firefighters and civilians. Most were treated on the spot for breathing problems or exhaustion.

Prime Minister Antonio Costa cancelled a planned trip to Mozambique to keep track of the fires. 

The government has asked the European Union to trigger its common civil protection mechanism, which will allow Portugal to access two water bomber planes stationed in Spain.

“We are facing an almost unprecedented meteorological situation,” national civil protection commander Andre Fernandes said on Saturday. 

Portugal regularly sees extreme weather this year. Extreme drought affected around 28% of the country last month. In May, 97% of the country suffered severe drought and 1% was classified as extreme. – AFP, July 11, 2022.


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