BARCELONA, SPAIN (AP) -Firefighters in Spain and Germany struggled to contain wildfires yesterday amid an unusual heat wave in Western Europe for this time of year.
The worst damage in Spain has been in the northwest province of Zamora where over 25,000 hectares have been consumed, regional authorities said, while German officials said that residents of three villages near Berlin were ordered to leave their homes because of an approaching wildfire yesterday.
Spanish authorities said that after three days of high temperatures, high winds and low humidity, some respite came with dropping temperatures yesterday morning.
That allowed for about 650 firefighters supported by water-dumping aircraft to establish a perimeter around the fire that started in Zamora’s Sierra de la Culebra. Authorities warned there was still danger that an unfavourable shift in weather could revive the blaze that caused the evacuation of 18 villages.
Spain has been on alert for an outbreak of intense wildfires as the country swelters under record temperatures at many points in the country for June.
Experts link the abnormally hot period for Europe to climate change. Thermometers have risen above 40 degrees Celsius in many Spanish cities throughout the week – temperatures usually expected in August.
A lack of rainfall this year combined with gusting winds have produced the conditions for the fires.
Authorities said that gusting winds that changed course erratically, combined with temperatures near 40 degrees Celsius, made it very tough for crews.
“The fire was able to cross a reservoir some 500 metres wide and reach the other side, to give you an idea of the difficulties we faced,” Juan Suárez-Quiñones, an official for Castilla y León region, told Spanish state television TVE.
The fire in Zamora was started by a strike from an electrical storm last Wednesday, authorities said. The spreading fire caused the high-speed train service from Madrid to Spain’s northwest to be cut on Saturday. It was re-established on yesterday morning.
Military firefighting units have been deployed in Zamora, Navarra and Lleida. There have been no reports of lives lost, but the flames reached the outskirts of some villages both in Zamora and in Navarra.
Videos shot by passengers in cars showed flames licking the sides of roads. In other villages, residents looked on in despair as black plumes rose from nearby hills.
In central-north Navarra, authorities have evacuated some 15 small villages as a precaution, as the high temperatures in the area are not expected to drop until Wednesday.
They also asked farmers to stop using heavy machinery that could unintentionally spark a fire.
“The situation remains delicate. We have various active fires due to the extremely high temperatures and high winds,” Navarra regional vice-president Javier Remírez told TVE.
Remírez said that some villages had seen some buildings damaged on their outskirts.
Some wild animals had to be evacuated from an animal park in Navarra and taken to a bull ring for safe keeping, authorities said.
Wildfires were also active in three parts of northeast Catalonia: in Lleida, in Tarragona and in a nature park in Garaf, just south of Barcelona.
Firefighters said that 2,700 hectares were scorched in Lleida.
They added that they have responded to over 200 different wildfires just in Catalonia over the past week. In Germany, strong winds have been fanning the blaze about 50 kilometres southwest of Berlin, prompting officials to declare an emergency on Saturday.
Villagers in Frohnsdorf, Tiefenbrunnen and Klausdorf were told to immediately seek shelter at a community center in the nearby town of Treuenbrietzen. “This is not a drill,” town officials tweeted.
Germany has seen numerous wildfires in recent days following a period of intense heat and little rain. The country’s national weather agency said the mercury topped 38 degrees Celsius at some measuring station in the east yesterday.