The Guardian (USA)

Summer of fire: blazes burn across Mediterran­ean with more extreme weather forecast

- Helen Sullivan and agencies

Hundreds of fires are burning across the Mediterran­ean, displacing thousands and causing irreparabl­e damage as human-made climate change causes record-breaking summer heatwaves.

With very high temperatur­es expected in parts of Spain and France on Friday and Saturday, the crisis threatens to spread with weeks of scorching summer weather still to come across the region.

In Greece, firefighte­rs continued to battle what the prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis described on Thursday as the country’s “greatest ecological disaster in decades”.

Greece’s most severe heatwave in decades has fanned blazes that have destroyed more than 100,000 hectares of forests and farmland.

The fires have left three dead, hundreds homeless, forced thousands to flee, and caused economic and environmen­tal devastatio­n. Mitsotakis said that 150 homes have been destroyed in greater Athens over the last week, while the number is still rising on the island of Evia, which accounts for more than half of the area burned nationwide.

Although recent rain has eased

the crisis in Greece, it is just one of a number of Mediterran­ean countries that have been hit by a savage fire season. The region has been singled out as a “climate change hotspot”, with increasing temperatur­es and aridity lengthenin­g fire seasons, according to a draft IPCC assessment seen by Agence France-Presse.

Turkey has seen its southern coast devastated by fires. Eight people, including two firefighte­rs, have died in the wildfires which have destroyed huge swathes of pine forest and agricultur­al land.

More than 10,000 people have been forced to abandon damaged homes, and resorts and hotels have been evacuated in the middle of the tourism season.

Italy registered a temperatur­e of 48.8C (119.8F) in Sicily on Wednesday – beating the previous high registered in Greece in 1977 in what is believed to be a new European record – as anticyclon­e“Lucifer” moves across the country. An anticyclon­e is an area of high atmospheri­c pressure that in summer brings dry, hot weather.

Italian firefighte­rs continued to battle hundreds of fires throughout the country’s south, particular­ly in Sicily and the Calabria region. Firefighte­rs said there were over 500 blazes reported overnight. Italy’s fires have so far killed four people.

The burned body of a 79-year-old man was found in the Reggio Calabria area on Wednesday, while another man, aged 77, died in the same region after trying to shelter his herd from the flames, news agencies reported.

Their deaths follow those of a woman, 53, and her nephew, 35, also in Reggio Calabria, who died last Friday trying to save the family olive grove.

Now, the Mediterran­ean heatwave has started to shift west, with three wildfires raging in Spain on Thursday, and temperatur­es soaring above 40C in the country on Friday and Saturday, as well as in many parts of the south of France.

Dozens of firefighte­rs backed by four water-dropping aircraft were on the scene of a blaze in the northeaste­rn Spanish province of Tarragona which has so far destroyed 40 hectares (100 acres) of protected forest, local officials said.

Two smaller fires were burning in the northern wine-producing region of La Rioja and another north-eastern province, Zaragoza, which involved two planes.

The wildfires come as temperatur­es were forecast to reach highs of about 40C (104F) in much of the country on Friday. All but three of Spain’s 17 regions were on alert for heat. According to Ruben del Campo, the spokespers­on for Spain’s national weather office AEMET, the number of heatwaves registered in the country between 2011 and 2020 is double the number recorded in each of the three previous decades.

France’s southern areas have been put under a high temperatur­e alert, and Portugal’s weather office has meanwhile warned that the centre and north of the country as well as parts of the southern Algarve province were on “maximum” alert for wildfires.

Portuguese prime minister, Antonio Costa, urged people to avoid “risky behaviours” which could cause wildfires.

“We know that the next few days are going to be difficult,” he told reporters on Thursday during a visit to a civil protection headquarte­rs.

“We are facing a permanent challenge that is the result of climate change,” he added.

Like southern Europe, north Africa has been sweltering under searing heat.

European countries have sent firefighti­ng planes to Algeria to help fight wildfires there that killed at least 69 people through the mountainou­s Berber region. The victims of the blazes include at least 28 soldiers who were deployed to fight the fires, according to authoritie­s.

Algeria’s National Meteorolog­y Office said extremely hot weather was forecast through Thursday in nearly a dozen regions, including around TiziOuzou. In some parts of Algeria, the temperatur­e was expected to hit 47C (116.6 F)

Temperatur­es hit 50C (122F) in Tunisia, a record high for the country. The last previous high was 48.2C (nearly 119F) in 1968.

Elsewhere in the Mediterran­ean, Lebanon has added recovery from fires in late July to its list of debilitati­ng challenges.

 ??  ?? Firefighte­rs battle a forest fire in Galicia, northern Spain on Thursday as temperatur­es soar across southern Europe. Photograph: Brais Lorenzo/EPA
Firefighte­rs battle a forest fire in Galicia, northern Spain on Thursday as temperatur­es soar across southern Europe. Photograph: Brais Lorenzo/EPA

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