Marlborough Express

Spain at ‘extreme fire risk’

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Wildfires in Spain have destroyed thousands of hectares of land and forced hundreds of residents to flee their homes amid a punishing heat wave across Europe.

Some of the fires continue to burn, with firefighte­rs working to extinguish flames that have now ravaged about 30,000 hectares. On Friday, the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on warned that all of Spain faced ‘‘extreme fire risk’’ because of the heat and drought.

The early heat wave broke some records in Spain, with Valencia Airport setting a record June high on Friday, logging a temperatur­e of 39 degrees Celsius and surpassing records set in 2017.

In Madrid, temperatur­es rose to around 40.5C in what the State Meteorolog­ical Agency said was the earliest major heat wave in more than four decades.

‘‘What we’re witnessing today is unfortunat­ely a foretaste of the future,’’ Clare Nullis, a spokeswoma­n for the World Meteorolog­ical Organisati­on, told the Independen­t over the weekend as she warned that early heat waves were being propelled by climate change.

Johan Rockstro¨ m, director of the German government-funded Potsdam Institute for Climate

Impact Research, on Twitter called the scenes in Europe ‘‘the new normal’’ and warned that extreme weather would only worsen if global emissions are not cut.

Sierra de la Culebra, a mountain range in Castile and Leo´ n, in northwest Spain, was one of the areas most devastated, with one workers’ associatio­n calling the forest fire ‘‘a real monster’’ as it formed a towering orange wall along what was once a lush green landscape.

On Monday, emergency aircraft dropped water onto rural land in the west of the country to stop flames from reigniting, while forest fires continued to burn in areas including Navarre and Catalonia, the Reuters news agency reported.

Hundreds of firefighte­rs have been working across several regions including Zamora, in the northwest, and Valencia, in the southeast, to extinguish flames.

Officials in Catalonia, in the northeast, said over the weekend that emergency services were struggling to contain more than 30 fires, the Guardian reported.

The heat wave also struck France, and a warning was issued in Britain by the Health Security Agency as the country recorded its hottest day of the year.

Temperatur­es in London passed 32C because of what experts said was a blast of hot air from North Africa.

In Germany, more than a dozen towns close to Berlin were evacuated as a precaution against an approachin­g wildfire over the weekend, Deutsche Welle reported.

‘‘The hottest time of year is usually between mid-july and mid-august,’’ meteorolog­ist Tim Staeger told the outlet.

‘‘If we’re already dealing with these temperatur­es now, there will likely be more days like this one, or even hotter ones, later this year.’’ – Washington Post

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