Spanish Firefighters On Alert After Huge Wildfire Tamed
Environmental News from Europe:
Emergency planes dumped water over part of rural western Spain on Monday to prevent flames from reigniting from a huge wildfire that had ravaged about 30,000 hectares of land during a heatwave, the region’s environmental service said.
The fire, which broke out last week during the country’s worst mid-June heatwave in over 40 years, would be the largest in terms of surface area damage over the past two decades if estimates are confirmed, according to Environment Ministry data.
“Even though there are no flames anymore, the work continues,” the service said. “Weather conditions are improving and ground and air teams are still at work.”
Hundreds of residents of small villages who last week had to leave their homes as they were threatened by the flames were able to return, regional authorities said.
Temperatures across Spain were lower on Monday, and footage taken from a helicopter showed rainfall over the Sierra de la Culebra, a wooded mountain range near the border with Portugal that is known for its population of Iberian wolves.
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Source: Reuters