PT
Fighting a forest fire
News 1 July 2026

Wildfire season is here: Portugal goes on alert

July opens with rising temperatures and Civil Protection already in prevention mode. What it means for anyone living in or visiting the interior.

July is here, and with it the thing that steals our sleep every summer: the risk of rural wildfires. Temperatures have started to climb, humidity has dropped, and the country’s interior is drier than we would like. Civil Protection has already moved into prevention mode, with reinforced resources and tight surveillance across the hills.

What is changing

The firefighting effort enters its most demanding phase between July and September, when heat and wind combine to create perfect conditions for fire to spread. That means more aircraft on standby, more crews on the ground, and a monitoring network that barely sleeps.

After some hard years — and the memory of the big fires is still fresh — the focus this year is again on prevention. Clearing brush, keeping safety strips around houses, and resisting the temptation to burn garden waste are small gestures that make all the difference.

What you can (and cannot) do

On maximum-risk days there are rules: no burning, bonfires, or fireworks, and real care with machinery that throws sparks. It sounds obvious, but most fires start through human carelessness, not natural causes.

If you are planning hikes or picnics inland, check your region’s risk index first and keep 112 handy. A poorly extinguished cigarette or a barbecue at the wrong moment can turn a quiet afternoon into a tragedy.

The Portuguese summer is made to be enjoyed — just with your head screwed on. See also our notes on the cost of living this summer and follow official warnings at prociv.gov.pt.

Illustrative · Photo: Vadim Braydov / Pexels

View of Almada, on the south bank of the Tagus
News 6 July 2026

Almada water crisis: regulator demands answers as major pipe burst cuts six areas

Weeks of supply failures, a petition with thousands of signatures and now a major pipe rupture: Almada's water crisis has reached the national regulator.

Turning on the tap and getting nothing has become routine in parts of Almada. After weeks of supply failures — with Costa da Caparica, Sobreda and Capuchos among the worst-hit areas — ERSAR, Portugal’s water services regulator, has formally demanded explanations from Almada’s municipal water services (SMAS). Then on Sunday things got worse: a major rupture in a main pipe left six areas of the municipality without water.

Why is Almada running out of water?

SMAS blames the strain on the system on the heat and on the seasonal population surge, which sent consumption soaring. For many residents that explanation is not enough: a petition demanding urgent measures has gathered close to four thousand signatures, and shopkeepers say they have been running their businesses around the outages “for over a month”. Sunday’s rupture, cutting supply to six areas at once, exposed the network’s fragility at the worst possible moment.

What happens now?

The ball sits in two courts. With the regulator, which awaits the municipal utility’s explanation of the causes and its plan to stabilise supply. And with local politics, where the case has already produced a round of finger-pointing — the opposition blames decades of municipal management for the network’s decay, and the issue looks set to dominate Almada’s pre-election summer. Meanwhile, with the heat continuing, residents are left with the oldest advice in the book: keep the water bottles filled.

See also: the heatwave putting pressure on the country. The regulator’s role at ersar.pt.

Imagem: Wikimedia Commons

View of Póvoa de Varzim on Portugal's northern coast
News 6 July 2026

Extreme heat likely killed two sisters in a greenhouse in Póvoa de Varzim

Florinda and Maria, aged 75 and 72, were found dead in an agricultural greenhouse in Estela. Police have ruled out crime and point to the extreme heat.

The heatwave sweeping Portugal appears to have claimed its quietest victims in Estela, Póvoa de Varzim. Two sisters, aged 75 and 72, were found dead on Sunday morning inside the agricultural greenhouse where they worked. The Polícia Judiciária attended the scene and ruled out foul play; everything points to extreme heat as the cause.

What happened in Póvoa de Varzim?

Florinda Ferreira, 75, was the carer for her sister Maria, 72, who had a cognitive disability. Authorities and family believe Florinda fell ill inside the greenhouse — where temperatures climb far above those outside — and that Maria, unable to call for help, stayed by her side. Relatives raised the alarm around 11am on Sunday after the two failed to appear at the Estela market, where they sold vegetables every week. They may have died as early as Saturday, one of the hottest days of this heatwave.

What precautions does this heat demand?

The tragedy is a hard reminder of what official warnings keep repeating: on days of extreme heat, farm work — especially in greenhouses — should be done in the coolest hours, with water at hand and never in prolonged isolation. Half the country remains at maximum fire risk and temperatures stay high in the coming days, so the advice holds all week: extra attention to older people and anyone working outdoors.

See also: the heatwave that put the country on alert. Official warnings and advice at ipma.pt.

Imagem: Wikimedia Commons

Historic building in central Kyiv, capital of Ukraine
News 6 July 2026

Kyiv hit by massive missile and drone attack: at least ten dead in residential buildings

Russia launched hundreds of drones and dozens of missiles at Kyiv overnight on 6 July. Apartment buildings were struck across several districts of the capital.

Russia struck Kyiv en masse again in the early hours of Monday 6 July: successive waves of drones and missiles — including dozens of ballistic missiles — killed at least ten people and injured more than fifty, according to Ukrainian authorities. Several apartment blocks took direct hits.

What do we know about the attack on Kyiv?

A residential building in the Podil district was partially destroyed between the fifth and ninth floors, and buildings were hit in at least four other districts of the capital. Thousands of residents spent the night sheltering in metro stations while rescue teams combed the rubble for survivors. The provisional toll stands at ten dead and dozens injured — numbers that may still rise.

Why does the timing matter?

The attack comes on the eve of the NATO summit, which opens on Tuesday in Ankara with the war in Ukraine at the top of the agenda. Hours earlier, President Volodymyr Zelensky had warned that Moscow was preparing yet another large-scale strike on the capital. The pattern repeats: whenever the diplomatic calendar heats up, nights in Kyiv get longer.

For civilians the arithmetic is simpler and crueller — another night spent underground, more buildings to rebuild, more families in mourning.

See also: June’s wave of overnight attacks and what is at stake at the NATO summit. Official statements at president.gov.ua.

Imagem: Wikimedia Commons

View of La Guaira, Venezuela, home to a large Portuguese community
News 6 July 2026

Venezuela earthquakes: Portuguese death toll rises to 95

The toll from June's earthquakes in Venezuela keeps worsening: 95 Portuguese and Luso-descendants dead, 58 missing, and more than 3,300 victims overall.

Almost two weeks after the double earthquake that devastated Venezuela’s northern coast, the toll keeps worsening: 95 Portuguese citizens and Luso-descendants are now confirmed dead, and 58 remain missing. In total, Venezuelan authorities count more than 3,300 dead and around 16,700 injured.

How many Portuguese died in the Venezuela earthquakes?

The latest count puts the toll at 95 within the Portuguese and Luso-descendant community — 82 of them dual nationals, including 17 children. The scale of the tragedy for the diaspora comes down to geography: one of the hardest-hit areas was La Guaira, home to Catia la Mar, a district with a heavy concentration of families of Portuguese origin. It was there, in fact, that Portugal’s emergency mission set up its base of operations.

What support is under way?

Caracas has announced measures for affected families, including a monthly payment and a housing credit line, and decorated rescue teams from seven countries — Portugal included — with the “Heroes of Venezuela” distinction. On the Portuguese side, consular support for families continues on the ground, in a process that promises to be long: with 58 people still unaccounted for, many diaspora families remain suspended between hope and mourning.

See also: the Portuguese community hit by the earthquakes. Consular emergency contacts at portaldascomunidades.mne.gov.pt.

Imagem: Wikimedia Commons

Airport runway seen from above
News 5 July 2026

Lisbon's new airport: the decisive report lands this July

Alcochete is the chosen site for the future Luís de Camões Airport. The technical report is promised for 16 July — and the timeline points to 2037.

After decades of indecision, Lisbon’s new airport finally has a location, a name and a timeline — and July is a pivotal month. The Government validated the Alcochete firing range as the site of the future Luís de Camões Airport, and the next step is imminent.

What is being decided on Lisbon’s new airport?

The piece everyone is waiting for is the technical report, promised for delivery by 16 July, alongside the Environmental Impact Study. These documents move the project from political intent to concrete plan: how it gets built, under what environmental conditions, and with what traffic projections — a point on which the Government has already pushed back, demanding the estimates be revised.

The cost is not small. The concessionaire’s initial estimate is around 8.5 billion euros for the infrastructure, and the timeline points to the airport being operational in 2037. That is a long horizon, but for a project of this scale it is the kind of timeframe civil aviation works with.

The impact on the region

There is also an immediate effect for people living nearby. The approved preventive measures cover about 71,000 hectares across seven municipalities — Alcochete, Benavente, Coruche, Montemor-o-Novo, Montijo, Palmela and Vendas Novas — with building limits so as not to compromise the project. In practice, the planning map for that strip of the country is constrained for years.

For the economy, a new airport is above all a bet on capacity: the current Humberto Delgado is at its limit, and tourism keeps driving demand, as seen in the strong run for hospitality. Official documents and decisions are published by the Government.

Illustrative · Photo: Dear Outdoors / Pexels

Hospital de Santa Maria in Lisbon
News 5 July 2026

Over 1.6 million without a family doctor: Portugal's health service enters summer under strain

The number of patients without a family doctor has risen again and waiting lists are growing, while a cross-party health pact still fails to gel.

Summer tends to be the toughest season for Portugal’s National Health Service, and 2026 is no exception. The latest data show the number of people without an assigned family doctor has climbed again, already passing 1.6 million patients — a trend that has been building for about a year and shows no sign of reversing.

Why are 1.6 million without a family doctor?

It is not only the family doctor. In the first quarter of the year there were fewer surgeries and fewer first appointments than in the same period of 2025, and waiting lists grew once more. For anyone awaiting an operation or a specialist consultation, that means months stacking on top of months.

Part of the explanation sits on the budget side. For 2026 a significant cut was approved in the funding for buying goods and services in health, and staffing rules tightened, capping the growth of headcounts. Less room to hire and to purchase means, on the ground, services stretched thinner.

The pact that never lands

Politically, the attempt at a strategic health pact — meant to give policy stability beyond any single government — still fails to gather consensus. Some see it as a rare chance to reform; others fear it opens the door to more private management inside the health service. While the parties fail to agree, it is the patient who waits.

For context, see what we wrote about immigrants registering with the health service. Official figures and services are on the SNS portal.

This is a sensitive topic; if you need health support, contact the SNS 24 line (808 24 24 24).

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Historic centre of Vouzela, in the Viseu district at the heart of the firefighting effort
News 4 July 2026

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: Wikimedia Commons

Praia da Falésia in the Algarve on a day of intense sun
News 4 July 2026

Heat alert: Portugal heads into an oven of a weekend

The government declared an alert across the mainland until Monday, with the thermometer aiming at 42 degrees. What to do and what to avoid.

If the air feels heavy this weekend, it isn’t your imagination. Mainland Portugal went into a state of alert from the early hours of Friday 3 July to the night of Monday the 6th, as a mass of hot air pushes thermometers to peak-summer numbers — up to 42 degrees inland, and tropical nights that barely let a house cool down.

Why it matters

The alert is not a calendar formality. It mobilises reinforced civil-protection and fire resources, raises the watch on rural wildfires, and warns the public to take the heat seriously. High night-time lows are the treacherous part: when the night doesn’t cool, the body doesn’t rest, and that’s when heatstroke hits the elderly, babies and people with chronic illness hardest.

What to do

The advice is simple and repeated for good reason: drink water through the day without waiting to feel thirsty, avoid the street and physical effort between 11am and 5pm, seek shade and cool spaces, and never leave children or pets in parked cars. A phone call to an elderly neighbour can be worth more than it sounds.

There is also the fire risk, always higher when the country dries out and heats up at once. A single careless spark in the countryside can turn into a very bad afternoon.

See also: why the wildfire season started so early. Check the latest forecast and warnings at IPMA before heading out.

Image: Wikimedia Commons

United States Supreme Court building at dusk
News 1 July 2026

US Supreme Court upholds birthright citizenship

America's highest court blocked the attempt to end citizenship for those born on US soil. Why it matters here too.

Across the Atlantic, a decision many families had been waiting for with bated breath: the US Supreme Court upheld birthright citizenship, blocking the attempt to end the right of anyone born on American soil to be a citizen of the country.

What was at stake

Birthright citizenship has been written into the US Constitution for more than 150 years. The idea is simple: anyone born in the United States is, in principle, an American citizen, regardless of their parents’ legal status. The push to restrict that principle triggered one of the tensest legal battles in years, and the court ended up reaffirming the traditional reading of the Constitution.

Why it touches us

Portugal has a huge emigrant community in the United States — from the Azores to New Jersey, from California to Massachusetts. For thousands of Portuguese-American families, this decision means the children and grandchildren born there keep their guaranteed US passport, no surprises.

It is also a reminder of how nationality rules are shifting everywhere, often in opposite directions. While the US keeps birthright citizenship, Portugal has just lengthened the timelines to obtain nationality — a topic we covered in detail around the Golden Visa and AIMA delays.

For anyone following these matters, it is worth reading the official source directly on the US Supreme Court website. Nationality, in the end, is one of those things we only value when it is at risk.

Image: Wikimedia Commons

Supermarket receipt resting on grocery items
News 1 July 2026

Fuel and groceries push prices up: Portugal's cost of living in 2026

Inflation picked up again in 2026, driven by fuel and a supermarket bill that stubbornly refuses to fall. What's rising and why.

If you’ve been squinting at your supermarket receipt lately, you’re not imagining it. After a few calmer months, inflation in Portugal picked up speed again in 2026, and the sting lands exactly where it hurts most: the fuel tank and the shopping trolley.

The numbers tell the story. Year-on-year prices rose by around 3.3% in the spring, well above where they sat late last year. The main culprit was fuel, which jumped between March and April after a winter of storms and pricier energy. Food, meanwhile, never quite cooled off.

What’s driving it

Petrol and diesel are the visible engine of the rise, but there’s a more stubborn undercurrent. Core inflation, which strips out volatile items like energy and fresh food, was running near 2.1% — a sign the pressure isn’t just a passing spike at the pump.

The better news is that economists don’t expect this to settle in. Forecasts point to average inflation around 3% this year, easing past 2.3% in 2027 as energy stabilises. Jobs remain strong and unemployment near 6%, which helps households absorb the hit.

What to do about it

For anyone running a tight budget, the advice is familiar but still holds: compare prices, fill up on the cheaper days, and keep an eye on the promotions that have come roaring back. Not glamorous, but it adds up by month’s end.

See also: the outlook for Portugal’s economy in 2026. The latest official data is at the Banco de Portugal.

Illustrative · Photo: Pexels

Beach and sea in the late afternoon
News 30 June 2026

Beaches with warnings: where not to swim this summer

A handful of beaches have swimming-discouraged notices over water quality. What that means and how to check before you go.

Summer means the beach, but not all the water is in the same shape. Over the past few days there have been swimming-discouraged notices at spots on the northern coast, such as Vila Praia de Âncora, Caminha and the Arda/Bico area, mostly because of spot checks on water quality. It is not a reason to panic, but it is a reason to check before you wade in.

What a notice like this means

When a test finds bacteria levels above the recommended threshold, the local authority can raise a flag discouraging swimming. It tends to be temporary, linked to discharges, heavy rain or currents, and usually clears once the water is retested. The trouble is that plenty of people reach the sand with no idea and jump in anyway.

How to check in two minutes

Before you load the car, it is worth checking a beach’s status on the official beach-information portal. Most Portuguese beaches keep excellent water quality, but the picture shifts through the season, so the safest move is to check on the day itself. Also look at the flag flying and follow the lifeguard’s guidance once you arrive.

The golden rule is simple: greenish water, persistent foam or an odd smell, and nobody in the sea on a hot day, is a sign to wait. There is always a beach in good shape nearby.

See also: the earthquake in Venezuela and the Portuguese community and what’s on around the country.

You can check each beach’s status on the Portuguese Environment Agency portal.

Illustrative · Photo: Mark Direen / Pexels

An Alstom building
News 30 June 2026

Matosinhos lands an Alstom plant for rail maintenance

Portugal's prime minister launched Alstom's future rolling-stock workshop and factory in Guifões. What it means for the region and for jobs.

Matosinhos is getting a new industrial engine. The prime minister was at the Guifões workshop park to launch Alstom’s future rolling-stock maintenance workshop and factory — a project that puts the region on the map of Europe’s rail industry.

The timing is no accident. Portugal is investing heavily in rail, from high speed to renewing its trains, and having maintenance capacity at home is an important piece of that puzzle. Instead of sending equipment abroad, it gets built and serviced here.

Why it matters

Industrial projects like this usually mean two things: skilled jobs and technical know-how anchored in an area. Rolling-stock workshops need engineers, maintenance technicians and a whole chain of suppliers around them. It’s the kind of anchor that can pull more investment into Greater Porto.

There’s also a long-term effect. When a multinational like Alstom sets up a maintenance operation in a country, it tends to stay — these sites serve fleets for decades. For Matosinhos and the region, it’s more than a ribbon-cutting: it’s a long-horizon bet.

What we still don’t know

As with any launch announcement, questions remain open: the exact timeline for operations, the final number of jobs and the pace of investment. Those numbers will tell, a few years from now, the real size of this move. For now, the signal is there — the rail industry wants Portugal on the map.

See also: the Portuguese economy at the start of 2026 and how to apply for public-sector jobs. Official agenda at the Government portal.

Imagem: Wikimedia Commons

Jerónimos Monastery, Lisbon
News 30 June 2026

Portugal returns to the UN Security Council

Portugal was elected a non-permanent member of the UN Security Council for 2027-2028, in a vote that left Germany out.

It is not every day that Portugal steps onto one of the most coveted stages in global diplomacy. The country was elected a non-permanent member of the United Nations Security Council for the 2027-2028 term, and it did so with numbers that speak for themselves: 134 votes, the best result in the Western European group, ahead of Austria and handing Germany a rare defeat.

What it means

The Security Council is the UN body that decides on peace and war: sanctions, peacekeeping missions, responses to crises. It has five permanent members with veto power and ten rotating ones, elected for two years. Portugal takes its seat from January 2027, with a say in major international decisions.

It had been there before, but returning with such an emphatic vote is a vote of confidence in the country’s diplomatic work. At a time when the world is wrestling with open conflicts, from Ukraine to the Middle East, having a seat at the table is no small thing.

Why it matters

For a country Portugal’s size, influence rests on credibility, not might. A Council seat creates room to mediate, propose and be heard — and pushes issues dear to Portuguese diplomacy, such as the oceans and language, closer to the centre of the debate.

See also: US-Iran talks keep the world on edge and the Venezuela earthquake that hit Portuguese nationals. Official details on the body are on the UN Security Council site.

Image: Wikimedia Commons

An operator at an emergency call centre
News 30 June 2026

112 operators on strike: what changes when you call for help

Portugal's Civil Protection emergency call operators have walked out over the lack of a dedicated career path. Here is what to expect if you need help.

When you dial 112, you expect someone to answer within seconds. This week, that someone is protesting. Civil Protection’s emergency telecommunications operators have begun a week-long strike, demanding something that sounds simple but that they still do not have: a dedicated professional career path, with progression and recognition that matches the job.

They are the ones who pick up when there is a crash, a fire or someone collapsing. Triage, dispatch, a steady voice on the line while guiding a panicking caller. Their case is blunt: they do critical work, often under enormous pressure, without a status that reflects it.

What if I need help during the strike?

Minimum services are set by law precisely so emergencies keep being answered. In other words, 112 does not shut down. What can happen is a little delay at peak moments, with fewer operators on shift.

The practical advice does not change: in an emergency, call 112 and stay on the line. For non-urgent matters, keep the emergency line free and use each service’s own channels.

The government says it is open to talks. Unions reply that they have heard promises before. In the middle sits a reminder that applies to the whole country: the rescue machine runs on people, and those people are asking for conditions.

This walkout lands ahead of a summer that already looks demanding for civil protection, with the heat pushing risk up on the ground.

See also: Wildfire risk rises with this summer’s heat. Official updates at Proteção Civil.

Illustrative · Photo: 112 Uttar Pradesh / Pexels