2023-02-17
The European Civil Protection Mechanism was activated 11 times, and around 350 firefighters and other types of support were mobilized to combat the wildfires. Despite the efforts, the fires resulted in a significant burnt area across Europe, including countries like Czechia, Germany, and Slovenia. As a result, the Directorate-General for European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations (ECHO) has started the EU civil protection preparation for 2023 in Lisbon, with the focus on drawing lessons identified from the 2022 wildfire season to improve preparedness and response capacities across Europe.
On the other hand, Portugal is again at the mercy of heat and drought, with wildfires ravaging the countryside. Despite the steps taken to minimize the risk of a similar tragedy that occurred in 2017, poorly enforced fire prevention measures and forests reduced to tinderboxes by an unprecedented drought and searing heatwave have exposed the country to the risk of uncontrolled destruction. The situation is so critical that Duarte, the head of an association helping victims of the wildfire in the central municipality of Pedrógão Grande, warned that what happened in 2017 will happen again if there is no prevention. The country invested in drones and water-bombing helicopters after the 2017 wildfire tragedy, but the equipment is not adequately serviced, and legislation enforcing a 10-meter gap between roads and vegetation is mostly ignored in central and northern regions. Portugal and neighboring Spain are particularly vulnerable to the increasingly hot and dry conditions that are making wildfires more frequent and dangerous, blamed on global warming by scientists.
A recent study in the Nature Geoscience journal showed that an unprecedented expansion of the "Azores high" Atlantic high-pressure system, driven by climate change, has left the Iberian Peninsula at its driest in 1,200 years. Winter rainfall is expected to drop further, making the situation worse. This year alone, around 58,000 hectares have been destroyed by fire, the most since 2017. Additionally, nearly 96% of mainland Portugal is facing severe or extreme drought, according to weather agency IPMA.
The wildfires and drought in Portugal serve as a wake-up call for countries worldwide to take action against climate change. The government needs to enforce fire prevention measures to prevent tragedies like the one in 2017, and the EU needs to take concrete measures to boost its firefighting capacities ahead of the 2023 wildfire season. If ignored, the country's wildfire crisis could result in significant damage to human lives, property, and the environment.
