A dangerous heat wave is fueling fires across Europe and climate change is "aggravating the situation, making countries more prone to wildfires and increasing the intensity of such events," a new EU report warns.
What's happening: Thousands of firefighters are battling blazes in searing heat across the continent. The fires have forced thousands of people to evacuate in France, Spain, Portugal and Croatia, as Europe faces another potentially record-breaking heat wave for a second consecutive month.
How can we prevent #wildfires 🔥
— Virginijus Sinkevičius (@VSinkevicius) July 14, 2022
✅ Build resilient & resistant landscapes
✅ Ensure the structure & use of forests, woodland & vegetation are resistant
✅ Invest in wildfire expertise
✅ Enhance firefighting preparedness
All useful 🇪🇺 tools by experts: https://t.co/Ywv6OrCv0H pic.twitter.com/X50HNyjJ2o
Driving the news: Studies show that as the climate warms the frequency of heat waves dramatically increases, raising the risk of wildfires.
The big picture: The report by the European Commission, the executive arm of the EU, published Thursday examines how to employ integrated fire management practices across member countries.
- Greater attention to land-based fire prevention practices should be a priority as evidence indicates climate change is potentially increasing catastrophic fires, according to the report.
Threat level: "Currently, 85% of the burned area in Europe is located in Southern Europe ... due to the higher risk weather conditions inherent to the Mediterranean region," with climate change projections showing that an average of more than a million of land burned in Portugal, Spain, France, Italy and Greece collectively annually during the past 20 years.
- Fire danger is "increasing in non-traditionally fire-prone regions such as northwest and central Europe" and wildfire risk is even rising in northern European countries, according to the report.
- "Next to the increase in the number of days per year with high to extreme fire danger, there will likely be an increasing impact from extreme fires across large areas, with long-term effects," the report states.
Meanwhile, Friederike Otto, co-lead of World Weather Attribution, which is a global effort on extreme event attribution, noted in a statement that climate change was driving the heat wave in Europe — along with heat waves elsewhere.
- "Heatwaves that used to be rare are now common; heatwaves that used to be impossible are now happening and killing people," said Otto, who's also a senior climate science lecturer at Imperial College London.
- "We saw this with the Pacific Northwest heatwave last year, which would have been almost impossible without human-caused warming."
Whether it'll be 40C next week or we'll break that record in one of the coming summers is irrelevant. Fact is, 40C is what we now need to be prepared for, thanks to burning fossil fuels. We're not prepared yet & many people will die, whether it'll be 40 or 37C. https://t.co/Oe3BgthsNB
— Dr Friederike Otto (@FrediOtto) July 14, 2022
Go deeper: Climate change reaches our backyards and reshapes our lives