El Dorado News-Times

Heat wave across Europe leads to drastic circumstan­ces.

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LISBON, Portugal (AP) — Firefighte­rs in Portugal were close to bringing a major, four-day wildfire near a popular tourist area under control Monday as sweltering weather gripped much of Europe.

The Portuguese Civil Protection Agency said firefighte­rs had contained 95 percent of the blaze in rolling hills by the country's southern Algarve coast, though they were wary of reignition­s and changes in the wind.

The news brought relief for locals and tourists who spent tense hours after dark Sunday as the huge blaze passed by the outskirts of Monchique, a town of 2,000 people 250 kilometers (155 miles) south of Lisbon.

High plumes of black smoke from the wildfire could be seen from the famous beaches of Portugal's Algarve region.

As the smoke gradually cleared Monday, 13 aircraft swung into action, including two large Canadair water-dropping planes sent by Spain. More than 1,100 firefighte­rs were deployed to fight the blaze.

Authoritie­s said 44 people required medical assistance, including a 72-year-old woman who was seriously hurt.

The blaze erupted amid a heatwave caused by a mass of hot air from North Africa that sent temperatur­es in Portugal and Spain over 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit) over the weekend.

The rest of Europe has also felt the torrid recent weather.

In France, where four nuclear reactors have been temporaril­y closed due to the heat, three cities banned the most polluting cars from the roads because of heat-linked ozone pollution. In Paris and Strasbourg, the ban concerned vehicles that are 12 years and older, while in Lyon only cars with a clean air sticker were allowed.

The heat wave in France was expected to last until Thursday, with temperatur­es peaking Tuesday.

In Germany, the grape harvest started on its earliest date yet amid an exceptiona­lly hot summer. The first grapes are used to make Federweiss­er, a young wine that gives the first hints about the year's potential quality. The main harvest is expected to start in late August or early September.

In Norway, authoritie­s warned motorists to watch out for reindeer and sheep taking shelter from the heat in highway tunnels. The country has an estimated 220,000 reindeer and more than 800,000 sheep.

Neighborin­g Sweden has been fighting an uncommon number of wildfires this summer, even above the Arctic Circle, and a European Union official pointed his finger at climate change.

"We are facing a new reality," EU Humanitari­an Aid Commission­er Christos Stylianide­s said. As a result, the EU must become "collective­ly better prepared and stronger in responding to multiple disasters across the continent."

Over the weekend, Lisbon broke a 37-year-old record to notch its hottest temperatur­e ever and new heat records were set in 26 places around Portugal.

That extreme heat was easing a bit Monday but parts of south and northeast Portugal remained at "extreme risk" of wildfires, according to the national weather agency.

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 ?? AP Photo/Javier Fergo ?? Signs: Town signs stand amid burnt out surroundin­gs outside the village of Monchique, in southern Portugal's Algarve region, Monday Emergency services in Portugal say they are still fighting a major wildfire on the south coast that threatened to engulf a hillside town overnight.
AP Photo/Javier Fergo Signs: Town signs stand amid burnt out surroundin­gs outside the village of Monchique, in southern Portugal's Algarve region, Monday Emergency services in Portugal say they are still fighting a major wildfire on the south coast that threatened to engulf a hillside town overnight.

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