If the year 2021 had been marked by violent fires in Europe, 2022 is already worse.

In the 27 countries of the European Union, fires have ravaged a total of 517,881 hectares since the beginning of the year (figures from July 16).

It's just over 5,000 km2, equivalent to the area of ​​a French department like Mayenne, or the islands of Trinidad and Tobago in the Caribbean.

In the whole of 2021, 470,359 hectares (4,700 km2) had burned in EU countries, according to data compiled by the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).

The gap could widen further given the forest fires that have raged in Europe in recent weeks, particularly in the west of the continent hit by heat waves.

“The situation is even worse than expected”

If the trend continues, 2022 could thus equal or exceed 2017, the worst year recorded in the EU since the creation of EFFIS in 2000, which saw 988,087 hectares of vegetation go up in smoke, i.e. nearly 10,000 km2 or the area of a country like Lebanon.

"The situation is even worse than expected, although we expected temperature anomalies thanks to the long-term (weather) forecasts", explains Jesus San Miguel, coordinator of EFFIS, who underlines that "the heat wave is decisive (in the situation) and clearly linked to global warming”.

Nearly 40,000 hectares have burned in France since the start of the year, compared to just over 30,000 for the whole of 2021, more than 190,000 hectares in Spain, compared to almost 85,000 in 2021, and more than 46,000 in Portugal compared to more 25,000 in 2021. Even countries that are not used to forest fires, such as Great Britain where the temperature for the first time exceeded 40°C this week, see the areas affected fly away: a little more than 20,000 hectares have burned since the start of the year, compared to just over 6,000 in 2021, according to EFFIS.

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