Business Day

Portugal on high alert for repeat of inferno

- Agency Staff Lisbon

Portugal went on high alert on Thursday as temperatur­es threatened to beat record levels in coming days.

The government warned of a high risk of forest fires in the first test of the country’s readiness after the worst fires in history last year.

The weather in Portugal has been relatively cool and wet so far in 2018 compared to many parts of Europe, but the government has gone to great lengths to ensure that the fires that killed 114 people in 2017 are not repeated. The highest temperatur­e on record in Portugal is 47.3°C in 2003, in the southern Alentejo region. Several places in the Alentejo are forecast to reach 47°C on Saturday, while Lisbon could reach 43°C, which is highly unusual for Portugal’s capital by the sea.

The Portuguese Institute of the Sea and Atmosphere said the heatwave that will hit in coming days will be similar to 2003, the second worst year on record for forest fires in Portugal after 2017. Wildfires in Greece last month killed 91 people in a sharp reminder of the constant threat of deadly fires in southern Europe during the summer.

Portugal’s government issued a “situation of alert”, raising the readiness levels of firefighte­rs, police and emergency medical services until August 6. There is a ban on lighting fires, and access to forests will be limited.

“The government will constantly monitor the situation and appeals to citizens to change their behaviours in considerat­ion of the weather,” the government said in a statement.

The interior minister resigned last year over the fires.

Since last year’s tragedy, which struck during an extreme drought, the government has hired hundreds of profession­al firefighte­rs and sharply stepped up controls to ensure land owners clear their lands of undergrowt­h. The government has also tested an SMS alert system, which will notify people of emergencie­s.

Although temperatur­es are soaring, so far there are no indication­s of the strong winds that made last year’s fires so deadly.

“If temperatur­es reach the levels we forecast, they will beat records,” a spokeswoma­n for the Institute of the Sea and Atmosphere said.

THE GOVERNMENT … APPEALS TO CITIZENS TO CHANGE THEIR BEHAVIOURS IN CONSIDERAT­ION OF THE WEATHER

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