Portugal wildfires: state of alert extended into next week as heatwave holds
Portugal's wildfire state of alert will run into next week with temperatures above 40ºC. The Vouzela fire burned some 14,000 hectares and European help is on the ground.
Portugal’s wildfire state of alert is not going anywhere. With the thermometer stuck above 40ºC, the government has signalled the restrictions will carry into next week — and the country heads into the weekend still watching the districts that burned over the past few days.
How long will Portugal’s state of alert last?
At least into next week, according to the interior ministry, which says the measures will hold for as long as the extreme heat does. In practice that means the usual bans stay in place: no agricultural burns, no unauthorised fireworks, and no machinery work in rural areas during the highest-risk hours. The health authority DGS has meanwhile raised its heat warning to orange and hospitals have stepped up contingency plans, much as the fire season promised when it opened in early July.
What happened with the Vouzela fire?
It’s under control, but the scar is a heavy one. The blaze that broke out on July 2 in Cambra, in the Vouzela municipality, spread into Oliveira de Frades, Tondela and Águeda and burned close to 14,000 hectares — the largest fire of the year so far. It took the EU Civil Protection Mechanism to turn the tide: Spain sent a military emergency unit with over a hundred personnel, and two Italian Canadair aircraft from the rescEU reserve began operating out of Beja. In Santo Tirso, overnight flare-ups kept more than a hundred firefighters on the ground.
The heat is squeezing other fronts too: in Almada, record water consumption pushed the council to declare its own alert and ration supply in the middle of the heatwave. Active fires can be tracked in real time on the official SGIFR portal, with weather warnings on the IPMA website.
The weekend forecast is full beaches and empty hills — which is exactly how civil protection wants it. If your plans involve the interior, take water, avoid forest tracks, and leave the lighter at home.
Image: Vitor Oliveira from Torres Vedras, PORTUGAL / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 2.0)