Wildfires spread across nine Mediterranean countries, killing at least 40 people, most of them in Algeria. Algerian authorities said 34 people had died in the mountainous northern region, with neighbouring Tunisia similarly battling wildfires.
Across the Mediterranean, Sicily and large parts of Calabria were among dozens of wildfires, Italian authorities reported, amid a record-breaking heatwave. Two people were killed in their homes, said officials in Sicily. Firefighters also battled blazes in Turkey, Croatia, Syria, Gran Canaria and a natural park near Lisbon in Portugal.
The frequency and intensity of the blazes were ‘unequivocally’ linked to the human-induced climate emergency, said the scientist Izidine Pinto: ‘In terms of heatwaves, more often we see that every study that we do, we see the fingerprint of climate change intensifying these type of events, of heatwaves. So, it’s pretty clear’
‘Like a blowtorch’: Mediterranean on fire as blazes spread across nine countries
Rhodes wildfires are climate wake-up call, says UK minister
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