Intense heatwave triggers wildfires, travel disruptions in Europe

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Most of Europe slid back into more typical summer temperatures Wednesday morning, but the aftermath continued from the record-setting heat wave that threatened lives, destroyed buildings and upended daily routines for much of the continent this week.

Here’s what we are still watching.

Fires are still raging in southern Europe.

Summer wildfires are a recurring feature in parts of Europe, but the blazes that have erupted around the continent over the past week hit earlier and harder than usual, and sometimes in unexpected places, officials said.

Fires continued to burn through areas of southern Europe, in countries such as Spain and Portugal where the heat was still intense Wednesday.

In Greece, hundreds of firefighters were still battling a blaze stoked by strong winds in mountains north of Athens, forcing hundreds of residents to flee. Authorities ordered the evacuation of several villages Tuesday afternoon after the wildfire ate through forest, fanned by winds approaching gale force. A children’s hospital was evacuated, and police officers helped firefighters carry older residents out of their homes.

The situation was getting better in Spain, where firefighters have managed to extinguish half of the wildfires that have ravaged the country in recent days, consuming more than 230 square miles of forests and killing two people, including a firefighter. About 15 fires were still active across the country Wednesday morning. Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain drew a clear line between the wildfires and global warming.

“Climate change kills,” Sánchez said Wednesday as he pushed for more ambitious green policies coordinated at the national level.

Officials in France were cautiously optimistic Wednesday as firefighters were mostly able to contain two huge wildfires that have burned nearly 80 square miles of dry pine forest in Gironde, in the southwest. President Emmanuel Macron met with firefighters and other emergency workers in the area later in the day. He said that France would invest in more firefighting equipment, such as water-dropping planes, and would overhaul its rules governing forest maintenance.

Vincent Ferrier, a local official, told reporters that the blazes had expanded very little overnight thanks to lower temperatures and higher humidity. For the first time in days, he said no new evacuations were scheduled.

“The fire is advancing more slowly,” he said. “But we want to remain careful.”

Area authorities preemptively evacuated about 37,000 people over the past week, and no deaths had been reported. Structural damage has also been minimal, although some campsites around Arcachon Bay, a popular vacation destination, were scorched to the ground. Police released a man who had been taken into custody over suspicions of arson in connection with one of the fires.

In Brittany, a northwestern region of France that is unaccustomed to summer wildfires, one blaze had burned thousands of acres since Monday but was slowing down, local authorities said.

London’s fire service had its busiest day since World War II, the mayor says.

At least 41 buildings were destroyed in the fires and 16 firefighters were injured Tuesday as they tackled a number of blazes amid the record-breaking heat wave, said London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who urged the world to do more to tackle the climate crisis.

He said that London’s fire service on Tuesday had responded to about seven times as many calls as usual. On a normal day, firefighters might receive around 350 calls, he said, and on a busy day around 500. On Tuesday, the mayor noted, they received more than 2,600.

“This is not normal; these are exceptional times,” Khan told BBC News.

The city was one of 15 areas around the country whose fire service declared a “major incident.”

Fires continued to burn well into the late hours of Tuesday, but the London Fire Brigade said Wednesday morning that most of the large-scale fires they had attended were under control. Khan said that the fire service had come “under immense pressure” and that volunteers had been drafted and training sessions canceled to assemble enough people to fight the blazes.

However, a spokesperson for the Fire Brigades Union said that rampant cuts and staff shortages had also severely curtailed the capacity of the fire service in recent years and had directly affected the ability of the brigade to respond to the blazes Tuesday.

There was still no indication on Wednesday as to the exact cause of the fires, but unusually dry weather in recent days has created tinderbox conditions. Khan told BBC News that most of the fires were grass fires and that a lack of rain in the past month had created “incredibly dry” conditions that allowed the blazes to spread quickly.

The heat will continue across much of Europe.

For some of Europe, forecasters were predicting that relief would come for the rest of the week, with more moderate temperatures and some rain beginning Wednesday.

In London, forecasters said that the rest of the week was expected to more closely resemble a typical British summer. Wednesday was expected to bring a high of 27 degrees Celsius (81 Fahrenheit) in London, with the high dropping to 23 Celsius (73 Fahrenheit) on Friday, according to the Met Office, Britain’s national weather service.

La Teste-de-Buch, a small town in southwestern France that has battled wildfires for more than a week, was under a moderate thunderstorm warning Wednesday, with forecasters predicting a high of 26 Celsius (79 Fahrenheit) during the day.

Amsterdam, which reached a high of 35 Celsius (95 Fahrenheit) on Tuesday, remained under a warning for extreme high temperature Wednesday, with a high of 26 Celsius (79 Fahrenheit) and the possibility of thunderstorms. But the high was expected to fall to 21 Celsius (70 Fahrenheit) with some showers on Thursday, according to AccuWeather, a forecasting service.

Unusually hot weather was expected to continue this week in the southern and eastern portions of the continent, said Jonathan Porter, chief meteorologist at AccuWeather. Relief will likely arrive in Germany on Thursday and Poland on Friday, while the heat is expected to persist this week in Portugal, Spain, southern France and northern Italy, he said.

“We continue to caution people that this is going to be extreme heat, and many people will continue to be threatened in the coming days,” he said.

There are still travel disruptions in Britain.

The record-breaking temperature did not make it particularly comfortable for commuters in Britain as transport authorities and railway services warned people to stay at home or face potentially severe disruptions.

Through Monday and Tuesday, transit authorities suspended services after the extreme heat prompted disruptions on lines around the country, damaging overhead electric lines powering trains in some sections of the railway and causing fires to break out in others.

The disruptions continued into Wednesday even as the weather cooled, and Britain’s railway network said that engineers were still inspecting tracks and repairing damage. Direct trains from London to Scotland and from London to Cambridge remained suspended in the morning, while some other lines ran limited timetables. The problems stranded many passengers at King’s Cross, one of London’s busiest hubs, where photographs circulated online of crowds scanning schedules of canceled services. Heather J. Fitt, an author who was transiting through the station from Portsmouth, on the south coast, to attend a crime-writing conference in Harrogate, in northern England, said that the experience had been stressful.

When she got off at King’s Cross, she discovered that her next train had been canceled.

“It was hot and stuffy and nobody knew what was happening,” she said.

The disturbances prompted Britain’s rail network to set up a task force to work on recommendations for withstanding future heat waves.

“The weather we’ve experienced this week has put a huge amount of pressure on our infrastructure, our staff and our passengers,” Andrew Haines, CEO of the network, said in a statement Wednesday. “With extreme weather events becoming more frequent as our climate continues to change, we’ve got to pull out all the stops to make our railway as resilient as possible.”

So what the heck was that?

In London, people woke up Wednesday morning to merciful relief: Perfectly reasonable temperatures, with a soft, restorative breeze. Taking a walk was no longer an act of endurance. Taking a walk was nice.

To some, the heat of the previous two days had been a life-threatening matter. The London Ambulance Service reported a 10-fold increase in incidents relating to heat exposure. To others, it was a frustrating nuisance, and something of a head-scratcher: This isn’t supposed to happen in Britain, right? Not this bad?

Across Europe, the searing temperatures invited questions about how to cope with such unusual summer heat. Many were forced to consider the reality of climate change and ponder whether the past two days had been a sweaty anomaly or a preview of a new normal.

Each heat wave seems to chip away at any sense that all will be just fine. Intense periods such as this one provide signs of a dawning realization of what could be in store, such as an increased market for air-conditioning units in Britain, a country that typically shuns them; governments crafting policies aimed at reducing overheating in homes; and news coverage that doesn’t shy from the connection to climate change. For two days, the heat was an oppressive, every-second presence, an unwanted house guest who demanded full attention.

But that’s over for now. The breeze feels nice, and the pub opens soon. This article originally appeared in The New York Times.