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WWF warns on “super fires” afflicting Europe and calls for forestry management

Sunday, July 7th 2019 - 11:17 UTC
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The report, released by WWF Spain, said the fires cost the continent an estimated €3 billion (US$3.4 billion) An average of 300,000 hectares of forest burn every year in Europe, European data show. The report, released by WWF Spain, said the fires cost the continent an estimated €3 billion (US$3.4 billion) An average of 300,000 hectares of forest burn every year in Europe, European data show.

Global conservation group World Wildlife Fund (WWF) warned on Thursday of the risks from new faster-spreading “super fires” in the wake of heat waves and droughts that have been afflicting Europe in what many see as a symptom of climate change.

 Although the Mediterranean is the area most affected by wildfires, traditionally wetter northern European countries have recently also struggled with huge forest blazes.

An average of 300,000 hectares of forest burn every year in Europe, European data show.

The report, released by WWF Spain, said the fires cost the continent an estimated €3 billion (US$3.4 billion) annually.

Between 2017 and 2018, hard-to-extinguish super fires that were fanned by strong winds and phenomena such as updraft killed 225 people in Portugal, Greece and Spain, and are expected to worsen due to an inadequate allocation of resources and rising global temperatures.

“The current policy regarding fighting wildfires, which is based exclusively on a system of extinguishment, is obsolete and inefficient in fighting a new kind of 'super fires',” said the report. It called for more prevention measures, including better forestry management.

Apart from rising global temperatures, the report cited rural depopulation and chaotic urbanization as being responsible for the worsening of wildfires.

At least 13 people have died in Europe’s most recent heat wave, with many countries such as France surpassing their highest ever recorded temperatures. Over 1,400 European wildfires have already been reported in 2019.

 

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