Current:Home > MyEurope Seeks Solutions as it Grapples With Catastrophic Wildfires -Core Financial Strategies
Europe Seeks Solutions as it Grapples With Catastrophic Wildfires
View
Date:2025-04-14 20:23:39
As wildfires ravage the Mediterranean region, many have asked if such blazes are an inescapable part of global warming or whether steps can be taken to reverse the trend.
A colossal heatwave, with temperatures hitting a record 48.8 degrees Celsius in Italy last week, has stoked the wildfires that have devastated swaths of land and killed dozens of people across southern Europe and North Africa, from Turkey, Greece and Italy to Morocco and Algeria.
“What’s clear is that climate change will lead us to see [more of] such events,” French President Emmanuel Macron said this week after traveling to the Saint-Tropez region, where a huge blaze caused 10,000 people to be evacuated from their homes.
Tom Smith, associate professor at the London School of Economics, said “climate change is certainly playing a role in every wildfire on the planet now.” By drying out the air and sucking moisture from vegetation, rising temperatures create ideal conditions for fires to start and rapidly spread.
The U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has predicted the Mediterranean region will face more extreme heat in the decades to come.
Yet while climate change plays an indisputable role in the proliferation and scale of wildfires, so too have changes in how people live and the way land is used. Human actions are also behind the vast majority of Europe’s blazes.
Much of Europe is fertile ground for fires, with about 40 percent of its landmass covered by trees. As rural populations have moved to cities and towns in search of employment, some farmed land has been turned over to flammable vegetation and forest.
The European Forest Fire Information System had by Aug. 18 registered more than 1,400 blazes this year—more than 600 higher than the recent annual average.
Fire specialists say the most effective steps to reduce the prevalence and ferocity of fires will be to cut back on the fuel they feed upon through effective land management, as well as improve rapid response capacity and increase public awareness.
“We do need to be prepared [as] these fires will continue to happen. We need to do something about climate change but more than that, we need to do something about the landscape,” said Cathelijne Stoof, an assistant professor at Wageningen University in the Netherlands.
As hundreds of blazes ripped across Greece in recent weeks, destroying tens of thousands of hectares of forest, the government faced criticism for its failure to prepare.
“Greek forests have been left to their fate for years now. They’ve become extremely dense, which is why they’re highly flammable,” said Demetres Karavellas, chief executive of the conservation group WWF Greece. He added that there were almost no forests in Greece with clear management plans and forestry authorities were “non-existent.”
After wildfires in the summer of 2018 killed 103 people, the Greek government commissioned a report by German scientists to identify the systemic problems it faced in wildfire preparedness. Experts said some of the report recommendations had been ignored, although this was denied last week by Greek prime minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, who said he did not agree with all the report’s conclusions.
Elsewhere, progress has been made to pre-emptively manage land. This includes using “tactical burns,” whereby fires are set when the weather is more temperate to remove dry surface vegetation ahead of the fire season.
Spain, one of the EU countries with the most forested land, has been hailed as a success, in terms of preventive measures and emergency response. These have enabled it to significantly reduce both the number and average size of forest fires, despite climbing temperatures and a rural exodus.
The country’s rolling 10-year average number of fires has been falling for more than a decade, during which only about a third of fires have burnt more than a hectare of land. In the 1980s, that figure was more than 70 percent.
A huge forest fire in the Avila region last weekend means that this season bucked the recent trend in Spain. However, Guillermo Fernández Centeno, a senior environment ministry official, said: “The fires can always go up in a particular year . . . but in terms of 10-year averages, we don’t think we can get it down much further.”
He and others credit greater public awareness and a fire management system that allows for a rapid response to deal with blazes in their early stages.
Pierre Carrega, an emeritus professor at the University of Nice, said French authorities had also implemented policies to reduce fire risk. Pastures and roads have been laid out in woodland to act as “fire breaks” and people living in forests are now required by law to clear brush around their homes—though this is not always respected.
In other parts of Europe, including the U.K., ecologists have reintroduced animals to graze on abandoned farmland to prevent build ups of flammable vegetation.
Stoof, in the Netherlands, said she believed that geographical interventions should be taken further. In rural Mediterranean landscapes, she argued, governments needed to invest in roads, high-speed internet and schools to attract people back to abandoned rural land.
While humans can help tame the landscape, they are responsible for around 96 percent of wildfires in the Mediterranean, according to a WWF analysis, with the initial spark often starting at the side of a road or the outskirts of homes. Several people have also been arrested on suspicion of arson in relation to the blazes in Greece.
Scientists remain concerned that the vast majority of investment is still towards suppression, rather than education and landscape management.
Carrega stressed the need to improve education around the often accidental causes of fires. These precautionary measures were always taken directly after big catastrophes but, he said, “little by little the effort slackens until the next big fire in five or 10 years”.
He added: “Forest fires are forgotten until they explode.”
Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021
Used with permission.
veryGood! (799)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- CNN's town hall with Donald Trump takes on added stakes after verdict in Carroll case
- Ahead of COP27, New Climate Reports are Warning Shots to a World Off Course
- With Biden in Europe Promising to Expedite U.S. LNG Exports, Environmentalists on the Gulf Coast Say, Not So Fast
- McKinsey to pay $650 million after advising opioid maker on how to 'turbocharge' sales
- Fossil Fuels Aren’t Just Harming the Planet. They’re Making Us Sick
- In the Philippines, a Landmark Finding Moves Fossil Fuel Companies’ Climate Liability into the Realm of Human Rights
- Inside Malia Obama's Super-Private World After Growing Up in the White House
- Warm inflation data keep S&P 500, Dow, Nasdaq under wraps before Fed meeting next week
- As SpaceX Grows, So Do Complaints From Environmentalists, Indigenous Groups and Brownsville Residents
Ranking
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- In North Carolina Senate Race, Global Warming Is On The Back Burner. Do Voters Even Care?
- New Study Identifies Rapidly Emerging Threats to Oceans
- As the Biden Administration Eyes Wind Leases Off California’s Coast, the Port of Humboldt Sees Opportunity
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Biden wants airlines to pay passengers whose flights are hit by preventable delays
- Everything We Know About the It Ends With Us Movie So Far
- Pregnant Lindsay Lohan Shares New Selfie as She Celebrates Her 37th Birthday
Recommendation
New Zealand official reverses visa refusal for US conservative influencer Candace Owens
When the Power Goes Out, Who Suffers? Climate Epidemiologists Are Now Trying to Figure That Out
Inflation stayed high last month, compounding the challenges facing the U.S. economy
Our final thoughts on the influencer industry
Hackers hit Rhode Island benefits system in major cyberattack. Personal data could be released soon
Has JPMorgan Chase grown too large? A former White House economic adviser weighs in
The Decline of Kentucky’s Coal Industry Has Produced Hundreds of Safety and Environmental Violations at Strip Mines
Toyota to Spend $35 Billion on Electric Push in an Effort to Take on Tesla