Web Analytics Made Easy - Statcounter
top of page

Fire Incidents

Morocco Wildfires

2023-02-17

Morocco has suffered from its worst wildfire season to date, as nearly 32,000 hectares of land have been lost to fires as of October 2022. At least seven people have lost their lives due to the fires. The situation has been exacerbated by high temperatures and a worsening drought, increasing the likelihood of wildfires.

In July 2022, forest fires ravaged wooded areas in northern Morocco. The fires were contained or under control as of Sunday evening, according to local authorities. However, one of the last outbreaks, which burned 500 hectares of land, was brought under control on Monday in the province of Tetouan. During a firefighting intervention on Sunday in the same region, a Turbo Thrush spraying plane made an emergency landing, but the pilot was unharmed. Firefighting teams dealt with the main fires, particularly in the worst-hit province of Larache, where one person died.

The total area damaged by the fires reached 6,600 hectares until Sunday, according to the National Agency for Water and Forests (ANEF). To compare, from January to September 2021, 2,782 hectares of forest were destroyed by 285 fires, particularly in the mountainous region of Rif (north). Twenty villages were evacuated as a preventive measure in often remote areas. ANEF drones were used to detect the fires for the first time. In addition, 2,000 elements of the Civil Protection, Water and Forests, the Royal Armed Forces (FAR), and the gendarmerie, along with local authorities and volunteers, were mobilized to stop the advance of the flames.


Environmentalists have claimed that the fires were largely due to human causes, but the impact of climate change has contributed. Morocco is not out of the woods yet as a heatwave is forecasted, with temperatures ranging between 41° and 46° until the end of the week in several provinces. Morocco has been experiencing scorching temperatures since last month in a context of extraordinary drought and water stress.

On the other side of the Strait of Gibraltar, devastating fires continue to rage in southwestern Europe due to a heatwave that broke several temperature records on Monday, particularly in France.

RUFF Fire1 offers our education and grant services and expresses our sympathies.

bottom of page