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Edition of 20:00 CETThursday, July 9, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages198 briefings today
Crime & DisastersSunday, July 5, 2026

Southern Europe wildfires burn thousands of hectares, nine injured in Portugal

Fires in France, Spain, Portugal and Greece force evacuations and draw on international reinforcements as a new heatwave sends temperatures past 40°C.

Wildfires fanned by a renewed heatwave have swept through southern Europe, injuring at least nine people in Portugal and forcing evacuations across France, Greece and Spain. Hundreds of firefighters are battling blazes that have consumed tens of thousands of hectares of forest and scrubland, as temperatures once again push beyond 40°C in parts of the Mediterranean region.

In Portugal, a fire that started on Thursday near Vouzela, southeast of Porto, has burned at least 12,000 hectares and left nine people injured, two of them seriously, according to the national civil protection authority. By Sunday, around 80 per cent of the perimeter was controlled, but reinforcements including 120 Spanish firefighters and water-bombing aircraft from Italy and Spain have been deployed. In Spain’s Catalonia region, a fire consumed 2,200 hectares near the Costa Brava, 97 per cent of it within the protected Gavarres natural area. Firefighters said the blaze had been stabilised but remained concerned about reactivations due to high temperatures and unburnt islands of vegetation; a man has been detained on suspicion of negligence. French authorities mobilised some 600 firefighters to contain a wildfire that has burnt more than 1,000 hectares at Trevillach, east of Perpignan, with a further 300 tackling a separate fire in the Drôme department. Roads were closed and emergency shelters opened, and the interior minister warned that the summer fire season had begun a month early.

In Greece, a fast-moving blaze on the outskirts of Thessaloniki engulfed a recycling plant, sending toxic black smoke across the country’s second-largest city and prompting evacuation alerts for three suburbs. Around 160 firefighters battled the fire overnight; a 76-year-old man was arrested for allegedly starting it by generating sparks from his vehicle. Fire service officials said about 85 per cent of Greek wildfires are caused by human negligence. The blaze came days after a separate fire in a nearby area killed a 12-year-old boy and his father.

The fires are unfolding as a heatwave brings extreme temperatures to western and southern Europe. Portuguese authorities warned of 44°C in some regions, while Spain’s Aemet weather service said the heat would last at least until Tuesday. The earlier June heatwave caused thousands of excess deaths: France reported more than 2,000 additional fatalities in one week, and Spain and Belgium each recorded over 1,000, according to health authorities. Scientists from World Weather Attribution concluded that such heat in June would have been “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate change.

As of Sunday evening, the fires in Spain and Portugal were partly stabilised, but authorities across the region warned that high temperatures and dry conditions would persist, with the heat expected to move northwards in the coming days. Judicial investigations into the causes of the blazes are under way in Spain and Greece, while European Union civil protection mechanisms have been activated to support Portugal.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Gravità locale vs. prospettiva globale
17%Low
3 blocs · positions from −0.50 to −0.10
Prospettiva climatica globaleResoconto locale e istituzionale
ALMLATSEA
Divergence between press blocs
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.20neutral
Latin American press−0.10neutral
Southeast Asian press−0.50critical
Spanish and Portuguese outlets are not included in this cluster.
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.20
Voice

The flames directly threaten tourism on the Costa Brava and injure civilians and firefighters in Portugal.

Mechanismlocalizzazione

It tells the event through the exact number of evacuated tourists and injuries, putting a human face on the disaster.

Omission

International aid requests and the European civil protection mechanism are not mentioned.

AlarmUrgency
Latin American press−0.10
Voice

Portuguese authorities activate the European civil protection mechanism and request reinforcements from Spain and Morocco.

Mechanismistituzionalizzazione

Frames the event as a test of European solidarity and coordinated response capability.

Omission

The context of climate change as a root cause is not discussed.

PragmatismUrgency
Southeast Asian press−0.50
Voice

The extreme heatwave in Europe is no longer an exception but an annual trend caused by climate change.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Shifts focus from the immediate event to the long-term climate framework, using scientists' words to strengthen the argument.

Omission

Details about the displaced and injured in individual fires are not reported.

AlarmOutrage

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Upd. 03:59 PM5 languages · 15 outlets
PreviousCrime & DisastersNext
15 outlets|5 languages|3 min read
Sunday, July 5, 2026

Southern Europe wildfires burn thousands of hectares, nine injured in Portugal

Fires in France, Spain, Portugal and Greece force evacuations and draw on international reinforcements as a new heatwave sends temperatures past 40°C.

Wildfires fanned by a renewed heatwave have swept through southern Europe, injuring at least nine people in Portugal and forcing evacuations across France, Greece and Spain. Hundreds of firefighters are battling blazes that have consumed tens of thousands of hectares of forest and scrubland, as temperatures once again push beyond 40°C in parts of the Mediterranean region.

In Portugal, a fire that started on Thursday near Vouzela, southeast of Porto, has burned at least 12,000 hectares and left nine people injured, two of them seriously, according to the national civil protection authority. By Sunday, around 80 per cent of the perimeter was controlled, but reinforcements including 120 Spanish firefighters and water-bombing aircraft from Italy and Spain have been deployed. In Spain’s Catalonia region, a fire consumed 2,200 hectares near the Costa Brava, 97 per cent of it within the protected Gavarres natural area. Firefighters said the blaze had been stabilised but remained concerned about reactivations due to high temperatures and unburnt islands of vegetation; a man has been detained on suspicion of negligence. French authorities mobilised some 600 firefighters to contain a wildfire that has burnt more than 1,000 hectares at Trevillach, east of Perpignan, with a further 300 tackling a separate fire in the Drôme department. Roads were closed and emergency shelters opened, and the interior minister warned that the summer fire season had begun a month early.

In Greece, a fast-moving blaze on the outskirts of Thessaloniki engulfed a recycling plant, sending toxic black smoke across the country’s second-largest city and prompting evacuation alerts for three suburbs. Around 160 firefighters battled the fire overnight; a 76-year-old man was arrested for allegedly starting it by generating sparks from his vehicle. Fire service officials said about 85 per cent of Greek wildfires are caused by human negligence. The blaze came days after a separate fire in a nearby area killed a 12-year-old boy and his father.

The fires are unfolding as a heatwave brings extreme temperatures to western and southern Europe. Portuguese authorities warned of 44°C in some regions, while Spain’s Aemet weather service said the heat would last at least until Tuesday. The earlier June heatwave caused thousands of excess deaths: France reported more than 2,000 additional fatalities in one week, and Spain and Belgium each recorded over 1,000, according to health authorities. Scientists from World Weather Attribution concluded that such heat in June would have been “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate change.

As of Sunday evening, the fires in Spain and Portugal were partly stabilised, but authorities across the region warned that high temperatures and dry conditions would persist, with the heat expected to move northwards in the coming days. Judicial investigations into the causes of the blazes are under way in Spain and Greece, while European Union civil protection mechanisms have been activated to support Portugal.

Divergence — who tells it how
Axis: Gravità locale vs. prospettiva globale
17%Low
3 blocs · positions from −0.50 to −0.10
Prospettiva climatica globaleResoconto locale e istituzionale
ALMLATSEA
Divergence between press blocs
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.20neutral
Latin American press−0.10neutral
Southeast Asian press−0.50critical
Spanish and Portuguese outlets are not included in this cluster.
Arab Levant-Maghreb press−0.20
Voice

The flames directly threaten tourism on the Costa Brava and injure civilians and firefighters in Portugal.

Mechanismlocalizzazione

It tells the event through the exact number of evacuated tourists and injuries, putting a human face on the disaster.

Omission

International aid requests and the European civil protection mechanism are not mentioned.

AlarmUrgency
Latin American press−0.10
Voice

Portuguese authorities activate the European civil protection mechanism and request reinforcements from Spain and Morocco.

Mechanismistituzionalizzazione

Frames the event as a test of European solidarity and coordinated response capability.

Omission

The context of climate change as a root cause is not discussed.

PragmatismUrgency
Southeast Asian press−0.50
Voice

The extreme heatwave in Europe is no longer an exception but an annual trend caused by climate change.

Mechanismuniversalizzazione

Shifts focus from the immediate event to the long-term climate framework, using scientists' words to strengthen the argument.

Omission

Details about the displaced and injured in individual fires are not reported.

AlarmOutrage

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15 outlets · 5 languages

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