Heat builds, fire risk maxes out: what the IPMA warning means this weekend
Portugal's weather service forecasts over 40 degrees inland and puts dozens of municipalities at maximum fire danger. Here's what it means for you.
If the air felt heavier this weekend, it wasn’t your imagination. The heat is back across the country, and with it comes the less fun side of a Portuguese summer: fire risk spiking into the red.
The national weather service, IPMA, has placed several districts under a yellow warning for high temperatures, with Lisbon hovering around 37 degrees and the interior pushing past 40, especially in the Alentejo. At the same time, dozens of municipalities — in areas such as Bragança, Castelo Branco, Santarém and Portalegre — have been flagged at maximum rural fire danger. It’s the classic, dangerous mix: heat, dry ground, and a single spark able to do real damage.
No drama, but stay careful
A rumour went around online that Portugal was about to hit 50 degrees. IPMA has firmly pushed back on that: the forecast values, while high, are well short of the mainland records of around 46 to 47 degrees. So it’ll be very hot, but it’s not the apocalypse — as long as everyone does their part.
In practice that means avoiding any burning or spark-throwing work during the hottest hours, not leaving glass bottles or rubbish in the bush, and taking extra care on countryside walks. At home, the usual: drink plenty of water, shut the blinds at midday, and check in on elderly neighbours.
It’s worth checking the IPMA fire-risk map before any outdoor plans — it updates daily and is the most reliable place to see how your area stands.
This hot spell isn’t a one-off either, which is exactly why the government has just reworked its climate strategy for the coming decade.
See also: Portugal approves a new climate strategy through 2030
Image: Wikimedia Commons