Portugal approves a new climate strategy through 2030 — and critics are already pointing fingers
The government approved the National Strategy for Adaptation to Climate Change 2030. Ambitious on paper, but some note what's missing.
In a summer that has already brought tightening heat and fires threatening the interior, climate adaptation could hardly be more topical. And that’s exactly what the Council of Ministers set out to tackle: it approved the new National Strategy for Adaptation to Climate Change 2030, opening the third cycle of national policy on the subject.
The idea, in short, is to prepare the country for what’s coming — heatwaves, droughts, fires and floods — with a more preventive approach grounded in recent science. The strategy ties together water policy, forest management and land-use planning, and its delivery is linked to the national recovery and resilience programme. The document now heads to parliament, while the previous 2020 strategy has been extended to the end of 2026 to ensure continuity.
What the critics say
Not everyone applauded. Environmental groups such as ZERO were quick to point out that a strategy is only worth as much as its execution — and they flag the absence of concrete financing and a defined timetable. In other words: fine intentions on paper, but the hard part is making it happen.
The government counters with the risk maps, which place Portugal among the European countries most exposed to the effects of climate change. Hard to argue with anyone who lived through the last few summers.
You can read the official framing of the strategy at the Portuguese Environment Agency.
See also: Heat builds, fire risk maxes out.
Imagem: Wikimedia Commons