Extract from The Guardian
Élisabeth Borne makes statement as more than 1,000 firefighters battle huge blaze south of Bordeaux
Thu 11 Aug 2022 23.46 AEST
Last modified on Fri 12 Aug 2022 01.09 AESTAs more than 1,000 firefighters battled the rampant Landiras fire south of Bordeaux, with hundreds of reinforcements expected, Élisabeth Borne said: “We must continue more than ever to fight against climate breakdown.” She added that from September, she would oversee a form of “environmental planning” to ensure France adapts to new climate situations, as well as planting new forests.
Local authorities said the massive blaze, which reignited on Tuesday, had destroyed more than 6,800 hectares (16,800 acres) of woodland in the Gironde area and the neighbouring Landes. Gironde had already seen about 15,000 hectares of pine forest destroyed in July before the same fire sparked up again this week and tore through woodland.
Firefighters likened the blaze to an entity with a life of its own. “It’s an ogre, it’s a monster,” Gregory Allione, from the French firefighters body FNSPF, told RTL radio.
Authorities warned of an “explosive cocktail” of weather conditions, with wind and the tinder-box dryness helping fan the flames.
“Conditions are particularly difficult: the vegetation and soil are exceptionally dry,” the local prefect’s office said in a statement, warning that extreme dry heat was likely until at least Sunday. “There is a very serious risk of new outbreaks.”
Temperatures in the region could top 40C on Thursday, weather forecasters predicted.
“You’d think we’re in California, it’s gigantic … And they’re used to forest fires here but we’re being overwhelmed on all sides – nobody could have expected this,” Remy Lahay, a firefighter deployed near Hostens in the Landes de Gascogne natural park, told Agence France-Presse.
Firefighters said they had managed to save the village of Belin-Béliet, which was transformed into a ghost village after police told residents to evacuate as the flames approached. “We battled all night to stop the fire from spreading, notably to defend the village of Belin-Béliet,” Arnaud Mendousse of the Gironde fire and rescue service said.
In nearby Hostens, Allisson Fayol and her father stayed in their home, their bags packed in case they needed to make a hasty departure.
“There is still a lot of smoke but for now it’s not coming this way,” Fayol told Reuters, after watching many of her neighbours leave their homes overnight.
Asked if arson might have caused the blaze to reignite this week, Borne said that “given the brutality” of the fire, there could be “suspicions about criminal intervention”, but she did not give details.
From his holiday residence on the Mediterranean coast, the French president, Emmanuel Macron, said of the firefighters: “These soldiers of fire are our heroes.” He thanked Germany, Greece, Poland, Romania and Austria for coming to France’s help. The government said Sweden and Italy were also sending fire-fighting aircraft to help.
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