Europe heatwave: Temperature hits 40 degrees in UK for first time

Wildfires in France, Portugal, Spain and Greece force thousands of people to evacuate

French firefighters spray water on a wildfire raging in the Monts d'Arree, near Brasparts, Brittany, on Tuesday. Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images
French firefighters spray water on a wildfire raging in the Monts d'Arree, near Brasparts, Brittany, on Tuesday. Photograph: Loic Venance/AFP via Getty Images

Firefighters in southwestern France battled on Tuesday to contain massive forest wildfires and Britain recorded its highest ever temperature, buckling train tracks and igniting grass fires in tinder dry conditions around London.

Southern and western Germany and Belgium were also braced for potentially record-breaking temperatures as the heatwave, which scientists attribute to climate change, edged north and east.

London’s firefighting authority declared a major incident on Tuesday in response to the surge in fires amid a record-breaking heatwave in Britain and Europe. The London Fire Brigade said it had deployed dozens of fire engines to several fires in and around the city, including 30 to a grass fire in east London. Television footage showed one blaze engulfing several homes.

A wildfire fuelled by strong winds raged on a mountainous area near homes on the outskirts of the Athens on Tuesday, prompting authorities to order the evacuation of at least two areas. Heavy clouds of dark smoke were seen rising into the sky over the area of Penteli where the fire broke out, some 27km away from the centre of the Greek capital.

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Numerous wildfires were reported in Italy. One of the biggest blazes broke out on Monday night in the hills of Massarosa in Tuscany, and was still raging on Tuesday afternoon. “Fire continues to devour the woods in a frightening way due to the wind,” the governor of Tuscany, Eugenio Giani, said. He said 365 hectares (900 acres) of land had been destroyed.

Fires were also reported in woods near Rome, as well as on the shores of Lake Orta north of Milan and near the northeastern city of Trieste, forcing the authorities to close a motorway and railway line, with temperatures set to stay high.

A temperature of more than 40 degrees was provisionally recorded for the first time in Britain, the Met Office said.

Authorities have put Britain, which often struggles to maintain key transport services when hit by unexpected weather such as heavy snow or high winds, on a state of “national emergency” over the unprecedented temperatures.

Firefighters at the scene of a blaze in the village of Wennington, east London, on Tuesday. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA
Firefighters at the scene of a blaze in the village of Wennington, east London, on Tuesday. Photograph: Yui Mok/PA

Train routes from London up the east and west coast of the country were cancelled, electricity companies reported mass outages and normally busy city centres appeared quiet. Network Rail tweeted pictures showing bends and kinks in the tracks.

To the east of the capital a large fire engulfed homes in the village of Wennington, with flames tearing across neighbouring fields and approaching a historic church. Elsewhere large grass areas around the capital were on fire.In southwestern France, the wine-growing Gironde region saw its biggest wildfires in over 30 years and authorities said a man had been detained on suspicion of arson.

The fires have spread across 19,300 hectares in the countryside surrounding Bordeaux since July 12th, forcing a total of 34,000 people to evacuate their homes.

About 2,000 firefighters, supported by eight water-bomber aircraft, were battling the blazes.

“Despite attacks from the ground and from the air, the situation has still not stabilised,” the state prefecture said, adding there had been no reports of death or injury.

A picture taken on Tuesday shows the camping reception ravaged by a  wildfire in Pyla sur Mer in Gironde, southwestern France where firefighters are struggling to contain two massive fires. Photograph: Philippe Lopez/Getty
A picture taken on Tuesday shows the camping reception ravaged by a wildfire in Pyla sur Mer in Gironde, southwestern France where firefighters are struggling to contain two massive fires. Photograph: Philippe Lopez/Getty

With human-caused climate change triggering droughts, the number of extreme wildfires is expected to increase 30 per cent within the next 28 years, according to a February 2022 UN report.

“We are seeing more frequent heatwaves, and the heatwaves are hotter than they would have been without climate change,” said Friederike Otto, senior lecturer in climate science at Imperial College London.

The health impact of the heatwave has been in focus, with particular care given to the elderly and vulnerable.

“People don’t really feel they have to drink a lot, so they can get dehydrated and it’s really dangerous for older people,” said stand-in manager Annick Van huylenbroeck, at a nursing home in Grimbergen, north of Brussels.

The Saint-Michel-de-Braspart chapel is seen amid the smoke from a wildfire in Braspart, western France on Monday night. Photograph: Fred Tanneau/Getty
The Saint-Michel-de-Braspart chapel is seen amid the smoke from a wildfire in Braspart, western France on Monday night. Photograph: Fred Tanneau/Getty

Hot night time temperatures are also hindering firefighting responses across Europe and worsening health conditions as the night hours fail to provide a cooling reprieve, experts said on Tuesday.

In Italy, temperatures were expected to hit 40 degrees across a swathe of the north and centre throughout the week, as well as in the southern heel of Italy’s boot, Puglia, and the islands of Sardinia and Sicily.

Five cities were placed on the highest red alert because of the heatwave on Tuesday. The alert, which warns of serious health risks tied to the weather, will cover nine cities on Wednesday, rising to 14 on Thursday, including many of Italy’s largest metropolitan areas, including Rome, Milan and Florence.

Although the mercury dipped back towards more normal summer levels in Spain and Portugal, firefighters in both countries were still battling multiple blazes.

Boats sit on the dry bed of Brenets Lake (Lac des Brenets), part of the Doubs River, a natural border between eastern France and western Switzerland on Monday. The river has dried up due to  a combination of factors, including geological faults that drain the river, decreased rainfall and heat waves. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/Getty
Boats sit on the dry bed of Brenets Lake (Lac des Brenets), part of the Doubs River, a natural border between eastern France and western Switzerland on Monday. The river has dried up due to a combination of factors, including geological faults that drain the river, decreased rainfall and heat waves. Photograph: Fabrice Coffrini/Getty

More than 30 wildfires continued to ravage parts of Spain, with authorities paying special attention to four blazes in Castile and Leon, and Galicia.

In Losacio, in northwestern Zamora province, where two people have died and three critically injured, more than 6,000 people in 32 villages have been evacuated.

“The drought affects us a lot, a lot. Keep in mind there hasn’t been rain for the last five or six months and some people from these towns are elderly, the properties are not well cleared and they are full of overgrown vegetation,” said Hanibal Pena (69), who lives in Tabara, Zamora province.

So far this year 70,000 hectares have been burned in Spain, around twice the average of the last decade, official data showed before the heatwave.

In neighbouring Portugal, around 50 municipalities, mainly in central and northern regions, still faced “maximum risk” of wildfires, according to the IPMA weather institute. Portugal has reported more than 1,000 deaths due to the current heat wave. – Reuters