Vouzela wildfire forces Portugal to call in Spain and the EU
With roughly 11,000 hectares burned and villages evacuated, the country activated the EU Civil Protection Mechanism during a weekend of extreme heat.
The major fire burning at Vouzela, in the Viseu district, became this weekend the face of a season nobody wanted so soon. By its third day the flames had already consumed close to 11,000 hectares and pushed Portugal to do something it rarely does: ask for help from abroad.
On Friday the government triggered the EU Civil Protection Mechanism and its bilateral agreements with Spain and Morocco. The first practical result came fast, with Spanish crews joining the more than a thousand personnel already on the ground. At the peak of the operation, Civil Protection had thousands of firefighters, hundreds of vehicles and dozens of aircraft spread across several fronts at once.
Villages on alert
The fire did not stay put. It spread to Oliveira de Frades, Águeda and Tondela, with two villages partially evacuated as a precaution and more vulnerable residents pulled out overnight, including an octogenarian man in Cinfães. Seven people were injured, among them firefighters and a civilian who tried to fight the flames alone. The Vouga rail line, between Águeda and Sernada do Vouga, remains closed because of the fire’s proximity to the tracks.
All of this is unfolding with the country under a state of alert declared for the whole mainland, in force since early Friday and extended through Monday. Forecasts pointed to highs near 40 degrees and wind complicating the fight — the exact recipe for what we are seeing.
The message for anyone living in or travelling through the interior is simple and worth repeating: no burning, mind the dry brush and follow the authorities’ instructions. We had already covered the heat state of alert and how this fire season arrived early and ablaze. Official updates are being posted by Civil Protection.
Image: Concierge.2C / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 3.0)