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WILDFIRES

Why has Spain had far fewer wildfires this summer?

Wildfires have been a common feature of Spanish summers in recent years, but several factors have come together so far this year to ensure far less destruction.

Why has Spain had far fewer wildfires this summer?
Spain's Military Emergency Unit (UME) battles a forest fire on the Canary island of Tenerife in 2023. AFP PHOTO/UME.

So far this year wildfires in Spain have burned 42,314 hectares of land. That may sound like a lot, but it’s actually a lot less than usual – 46.4 percent less than in the same period in 2023, to be exact, when 78,852 hectares were scorched.

In fact, 2024 hasn’t just been a low year relative to 2023 but the entire last decade – 46.5 percent less than the average for the last ten years, according to data from Spain’s Ministry for Ecological Transition and Demographic Challenge (MITECO).

In terms of geography, the inland regions have suffered more fires than in the north or on the Mediterranean coast this year. Burnt areas in these inland parts of Spain represent 43.5 percent of the total to date, compared to 37.35 percent in the Mediterranean area and 19 percent in northeastern Spain.

So far the most serious fire this year was in Jaén in southern Spain, which devastated some 3,600 hectares and forced hundreds of people to be evacuated from their homes. But it was still nothing like the massive wildfires of previous years that burnt 10,000 hectares or even 20,000 hectares that we’ve become used to seeing.

July and August are generally thought to be the worst months of wildfire season, but experts warn that September is still a crucial month for controlling them. Looking at data, however, the signs are good so far.

Why has Spain had far fewer wildfires this summer?

Meteorologist at El Tiempo.es, Mario Picazo, points to the different weather conditions this year, particularly over the summer months. In a sentence this basically means that conditions have been more favourable compared to previous years when it comes to wildfires.

Spain’s Military Emergency Unit has observed that vegetation has had a higher moisture content this year, especially during part of the summer. Dry vegetation and plant material is highly combustible and is one of the fastest ways for wildfires to spread.

Rain and higher moisture levels, according to Picazo, have played a role in reducing both the number and intensity of wildfires this year.

“Although it cannot be said to be the only factor, the rain in June has had a lot to do with it,’ stated one Ministry representative in Spanish daily El País.

Heightened awareness about the dangers of wildfires following major blazes in the summer of 2023 also likely played a role in the reduction. Awareness campaigns started in 2022 have obviously had some impact, seeing as around 80 percent of wildfires are caused by some kind of human action, whether intentional or accidental.

But it does seem the favourable weather conditions played a big role. Summer this year began with relatively mild temperatures and there has been rain to some degree in most parts of the country. This has increased humidity levels in drought-ridden areas that were previously extremely dry, such as in Catalonia.

There have also been some storms in the Mediterranean region, which, although isolated, have helped to reduce the dryness in the environment and made wildfires less likely to start and spread.

Juli Pausas, a CSIC researcher and fire expert, stresses that this year “there have not been the extreme conditions” that usually generate the large, uncontrollable wildfires we’ve become used to seeing in Spain in recent years.

Strong winds also play a role in this. “Fortunately, the wind has not blown with the necessary force to get the fires out of control,” Pausas says. This means that any fires that have started, something less likely due to the rains and higher humidity levels, are easier for the emergency services to control.

READ ALSO: What to do and what to avoid if you see a wildfire in Spain

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CANARY ISLANDS

FACT CHECK: No sharks have ever killed people in Spain’s Canary Islands

The death of a German tourist after being attacked by a shark has been covered in national and international media as having occurred in waters near the Canary Islands. However, the truth is very different.

FACT CHECK: No sharks have ever killed people in Spain's Canary Islands

Social media has been awash with the news of a German tourist who died after being attacked by a shark off Spain’s Canary Islands, an incident reported by the local coastguard on Tuesday September 17th.

The 30-year-old woman lost a leg in the attack and then suffered a heart attack while on a Spanish rescue helicopter, dying before reaching the hospital in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria where was being taken to.

Although the news is tragic, in most cases the shark attack is being wrongly reported as having occurred “off the Canary Islands”, a cause for alarm for the millions of international tourists who visit the sunny archipelago every year, as well as for the Canaries’ approximately two million inhabitants.

Examples of English-language media wrongly reporting that the fatal shark attack on a German tourist took place in Canary Islands waters. Screenshot: Google

In fact, the woman was sailing in a catamaran more than 500 kilometres south of the Canary Islands when the attack happened.

That, by anyone’s estimates, does not constitute ‘off the Canary Islands’. 

The incident took place much closer to the coastal cities of Dakhla and Bir Gandouz, which are part of the disputed territory of Western Sahara that is currently occupied/governed by Morocco.

Most people have never heard of these cities, and when the aim of media outlets is to generate clicks rather than report more accurately, opting for the well-known Canary Islands in the headline is what generates more attention. 

To give you an idea of how much 500 kilometres is, the distance between Madrid in central Spain and Málaga on Spain’s southern Costa del Sol is 534 km, a distance which takes over five hours by car to cover. 

The Canaries are indeed close to both Western Sahara and Morocco, with around 100 kilometres separating the easterly island of Fuerteventura from the Moroccan city of Tarfaya.

Furthermore, there are bodies of water south of the Canaries that are disputed between Spain and Morocco, but the shark attack on the German tourist did not take place in one of these, rather in what’s called a Moroccan Exclusive Economic Zone.

Therefore it would be far more accurate to say that the shark attack happened off Western Sahara or Morocco, depending on one’s political affiliations.

Do shark attacks actually happen in Spain’s Canary Islands?

Since international records began around the year 1500, there have been 3,349 shark attacks around the world. 

Of these shark attacks, only thirteen of them have occurred in Spain and just seven were recorded in waters around the Canary Islands.

This is according to data from the International Shark Attack File of Florida’s Museum of Natural History, run by the University of Florida.

Their data shows that four shark attacks took place in waters around Gran Canaria, one in Tenerife, another in Fuerteventura, and the seventh has no exact location specified.

While it is of interest that all of these shark attacks in waters around the Atlantic archipelago took place between 2004 and 2019, none of them have been fatal. There have been shark sightings in the Canaries in 2024, but no attacks.

Therefore, it is inaccurate to say that this latest deadly shark attack, or any other, has ever taken place in Canary Island waters.

There has only been one recorded fatal shark attack in Spanish waters, which according to records occurred in 1902 in the Balearic Islands.

READ MORE: Which sharks are found in Spain and are they at all dangerous?

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