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‘Climate breakdown’: State of calamity in Portugal as fires rage out of control

By Pedro Nunes and Sergio Goncalves
Updated

Lisbon: More than 100 bushfires have stretched thousands of firefighters to the limit in northern Portugal, the worst spate of fires in recent years that spread out of earlier in the week.

Portuguese Prime Minister Luis Montenegro has declared a state of calamity for the hardest-hit areas, invoking powers to mobilise more firefighters and civil servants. He also called on police investigators to redouble their efforts to find those who started the blazes and pledged help for those who have lost their homes or have been evacuated.

“We are well aware that these difficult hours are not over yet,” Montenegro told the nation in a televised address. “We have to continue to give everything we have and ask for help from our partners and friends so that we can reinforce the protection of our people and property.”

Firefighters tackle a blaze in Agueda, in the Aveiro region of Portugal.

Firefighters tackle a blaze in Agueda, in the Aveiro region of Portugal.Credit: Bloomberg

The European Copernicus satellite service said more than 15,000 hectares had been scorched and a combined 13 kilometres of fire fronts had been detected. It added that an area home to 210,000 people was exposed to the fire risk.

The hot, dry conditions behind the outbreaks in Portugal coincided this week with flooding in central Europe caused by storm Boris which killed at least 12 people. The European Union said the juxtaposed extreme weather phenomena were proof of a “climate breakdown”.

Spain’s military sent 240 soldiers and vehicles from its emergency response battalions specialised in combating fires to its neighbour.

Fire burns near homes on the bank of the Vouga river near Sever do Vouga, a town in northern Portugal that has been surrounded by forest fires.

Fire burns near homes on the bank of the Vouga river near Sever do Vouga, a town in northern Portugal that has been surrounded by forest fires.Credit: AP

Four water-dumping planes from France, two from Spain and two from Italy were deployed after answering an appeal to help their fellow EU member. Morocco likewise responded to a request by Portugal with two water-dumping planes.

“The thick smoke produced by most of these fires is making it very difficult for air units to operate,” said Civil Protection official André Fernandes. “We are still at high risk for forest fires over the next 48 hours.”

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Thick grey smoke and the smell of burnt wood reached some 85 kilometres across the border into north-west Spain.

A burnt property in Aveiro, Portugal.

A burnt property in Aveiro, Portugal.Credit: Bloomberg

Montenegro made a special call for security forces to pursue both arsonists and any individuals who started a fire out of negligence. Portuguese national police said they have arrested seven men suspected of having started fires. Authorities have prohibited the use of heavy farming equipment to reduce the risk of inadvertently starting a blaze.

Among the hardest-hit areas is the district of Aveiro, south of the northern city of Porto, but several major blazes were also raging out of control in other wooded areas.

Authorities have yet to release figures for property damage or the number of evacuees, but Portuguese state broadcaster RTP has shown charred houses in rural villages and residents trying to battle flames with buckets of water, hoses, and even large tree branches. Other televised images showed visibility reduced to a few meters as orange smoke enveloped the terrain.

Three firefighters died in their vehicle on Tuesday, while another had succumbed to what authorities called a “sudden illness” while on duty over the weekend. Three civilians have also perished, according to civil protection authorities. Health services have attended to 10 seriously wounded people and another 49 people with minor injuries, Fernandes said.

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Portugal was devasted by massive fires in 2017 that killed more than 120 people.

Experts link the fires to both climate change and the abandonment of traditional farming and forestry professions that helped keep rural areas clear of underbrush that is now fuel for fires.

AP

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/world/europe/firefighters-perish-as-portugal-battles-dozens-of-blazes-20240918-p5kbn2.html