MADRID: A fourth Portuguese firefighter died of injuries sustained battling a wildfire on Saturday as Spain slowly got the upper hand over fires that have scorched vast swaths of territory.
Eight people have now died in the two countries that have been gripped by a summer of fires fueled by heat waves, tinderbox conditions, and strong winds.
Portugal’s presidency said that a firefighter had died of injuries suffered this week in Sabugal in the northeast.
The media said the 45-year-old had been working for a private company battling the fires.
Spain has also counted four deaths.
However, with weather conditions improving, Spanish authorities stated that the tide appeared to have turned in the fight against the fires, which have been mainly raging in the country’s west and northwest.
The head of Spain’s civil protection and emergencies service, Virginia Barcones, said there were still 18 “treacherous” fires burning.
But she added that Spanish emergency services, backed by European reinforcements, had almost contained the blazes.
“We will need a final push to be done with this horrible situation,” she said.
“There are fewer of them, and the end is a lot nearer.”
The Spanish regions of Castile and Leon, Extremadura, and Galicia have been hardest hit by the fires that flared during the latest heatwave, which saw temperatures soar to 40° C and above.
In Portugal, the office of President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa sent condolences to the family of the fireman “who tragically lost his life after directly combating the forest fires in the Sabugal municipality.”
The amount of land burnt across the Iberian peninsula has hit a total area about the size of the US state of Delaware, based on EU statistics.
The European Forest Fire Information System, EFFIS, reported that Spain lost a record 403,000 hectares of forest this year, while Portugal lost 278,000 hectares.
The total area is approximately 6,810 sq. km.
The fire emergency has thrown a spotlight on climate change and trends that have left Spain’s countryside vulnerable.
Castile and Leon have suffered from decades of rural exodus, an aging population, and a decline of farming and livestock grazing that once helped keep forests clear of tinder.
The fires have fueled accusations in Spain that politicians mishandled the crisis.
The main opposition Popular Party has accused Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez, a Socialist, of withholding aid to damaged regions where its officials govern.
According to EFFIS data analyzed by AFP, Spain is one of four EU countries experiencing their worst year for wildfires since statistics began in 2006, along with Cyprus, Germany, and Slovakia.
Scientists say climate change is driving longer, more intense, and more frequent heatwaves worldwide.
Lower humidity in the air, vegetation and soil make it easier for wildfires to ignite and harder to control.