Portugal deploys 3,000 firefighters to battle heatwave blazes on Camino Portuguese.
Portuguese authorities announced a ‘state of contingency’ as at least 29 people have reported minor injuries from fires.
Wildfires are sweeping across northern and central Portugal, where an estimated 3,000 firefighters and more than 60 aircraft are battling to quell the flames amid scorching temperatures.
Authorities said 12 firefighters and 17 civilians required medical assistance to treat minor injuries caused by the blazes, Portuguese state television RTP and other local media reported on Sunday.
The European Union on Sunday activated its firefighting air fleet assistance programme that allows member nations to share resources. Spain, which has also endured wildfires recently, quickly responded by mobilising two firefighting planes to send to its Iberian neighbour, according to EU Crisis Commissioner Janez Lenarcic.
Portugal’s government said it has deployed 60 aircraft to support its ground crews.
Portugal has long suffered large, and sometimes tragic, forest fires. In 2017, out-of-control wildfires killed more than 100 people.
The EU says climate change has the continent facing one of its hardest years for natural disasters such as droughts and wildfires.
State of contingency’
Fires have been burning in several areas since last week and nearly 250 new fires were reported to have started on Friday and Saturday.
The government has announced a “state of contingency” from July 11 to 15 – on level beneath the states of calamity and emergency, and Portugal’s Prime Minister Antonio Costa has cancelled a planned trip to Mozambique so that he can monitor the fires.
“We are facing an almost unprecedented situation in meteorological terms”, Andre Fernandes, the national commander of civil protection, said on Saturday.
Portugal has already seen extreme weather this year, with a drought affecting around 28 percent of the country’s territory in June, compared to just one percent in May.
Scientists say climate change is linked to more extreme and more frequent weather events, including heatwaves and forest fires.
The Portuguese Institute for the Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA) predicted a gradual increase in temperatures of over 40 degrees Celsius (104 Fahrenheit) in some areas of the country this weekend.