Wildfires are spreading across Europe and forcing more people to flee as a deadly heat wave envelopes much of the continent that officials warn is being aggravated by climate change.
The big picture: Firefighters are tackling blazes in searing heat in France, Spain, Portugal, Greece, Croatia and Slovenia, as well as Morocco's northern mountains — where a forest fire killed at least one person and caused over 1,000 families to evacuate.
- More than 28,000 people have fled blazes in southwestern France, per the AP, where several regions were on high alert for potentially record temperatures on Monday.
- About 3,200 residents were evacuated from Spain's Mijas hills, though some have since returned, per the BBC, which notes over 1,000 heat-related deaths have been recorded in Spain and fire-ravaged Portugal in recent days.
What to watch: Though officials say the fires in Portugal have been contained, they warn the risk remains high after temperatures of up to 108°F were forecast for this week, per the Guardian.
Meanwhile, British farmers have expressed concern about the threat of crop fires after the U.K. Met Office issued its first-ever Red warning for extreme heat— predicting there's an 80% chance the national temperature record of 101.66°F (38.7°C) will be beaten by Wednesday.
In photos
Another European country asks for support with forest fires 🔥
— Daniel Puglisi (@daniel_puglisi) July 17, 2022
To help Slovenia 🇸🇮 deal with the fire in Nova Gorica a Canadair plane from the RescEU 🇪🇺 fleet based in Croatia 🇭🇷 is on its way. #eucivpro pic.twitter.com/laTGTqjLRn
On 15 July, a large #wildfire broke out in Crete, #Greece🇬🇷
— Copernicus EU (@CopernicusEU) July 17, 2022
More than 150 firefighters 👩🚒 are mobilised to contain the blaze
The burn scar surrounding Melambes (#Μέλαμπες) is visible in the image captured by #Copernicus #Sentinel2 🇪🇺🛰️ on 16 July #πυρκαγιά #κρήτη pic.twitter.com/VjOIQilWeO
Go deeper: Historic heat wave, wildfires hit Europe as temperatures climb in U.S.