Portugal wildfires: Why are Iberian forests so flammable?

Portugal wildfires: Why are Iberian forests so flammable?

Wildfires have been raging in central and northern Portugal since 15 September, claiming at least five lives and injuring 182 people.

The government decreed a day of national mourning on Friday to honour the victims of the fires.

An estimated 122,380 hectares worth of land has burned in the blazes, according to the Portuguese Nature Conservation and Forestry Institute (ICNF). About 60% of the land incinerated was forest stands, 29% of it scrub forest and 11% cropland.

Portugal is among the European countries hardest hit by wildfires in recent years.

Experts claim the recent disaster has been caused by a combination of strong winds, climate change bringing higher temperatures than usual for the late summer (exceeding 30ºC) and very low humidity.

They also warn that a lack of biodiversity in Portuguese forests and a rising depopulation of these areas are the biggest factors that contribute to extreme wildfires.

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"We're heading towards a very worrying situation in terms of climate change, in which these very critical conditions that we've had are going to happen more and more," Maria Conceição Caldeira, ForEco researcher and coordinator, said. "We really need to have a very adapted landscape."

Former Portuguese Green MEP Francisco Guerreiro is among the most vocal politicians in calling out for more biodiversity in this country's forests.

"What is missing in Portuguese forests is biodiversity and responsible long-term management," he said. "We need more and better forests."

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A need for a more diverse forest landscape

According to the ICNF, Portugal's forest area is 26% eucalyptus trees, 23% cluster pine, 23% cork oak, and 11% holm oak. Researchers do not consider these four tree species varied enough to prevent the rapid spread of wildfires.

"There is no tree species that will stop wildfires happening," Conceição Caldeira said. "There is also no tree species which will determine whether the fire will be more intense or not."

Yet because some trees grow longer than others and may respond differently to fires, a combination of species along the landscape will help the country avoid intense wildfires.

With the effects of the deadly wildfires of June 2017 still being felt, forest management has again come under scrutiny.

Climate groups Climáximo and Emergência Florestal are organising demonstrations across Portugal on 22 September to protest against the apparent inaction in preventing forest fires.

Why is the eucalyptus getting the blame?

Many locals have also been pointing fingers at the abusive use of eucalyptus in Portuguese forests.

Despite the eucalyptus being native to south-eastern Australia, the tree species covers 1.3 million hectares of forested area in Europe, according to the European Atlas of Forest Tree Species.

More than 80% of this area is in the Iberian Peninsula. And with wildfires becoming more common, researchers say they understand the anger towards the eucalyptus.

Because it grows up to 70 metres tall, making it the tallest tree in Europe, fires in eucalyptus plantations tend to be very dangerous.

National Forest Inventories
National Forest Inventories - Frequency of Eucalyptus spp. occurrences within the field observations as reported by the National Forest Inventories

"The association with the wildfires is natural," Domingos Xavier Viegas, director of the Centre for Forest Fire Research (CEIF), said. "The eucalyptus is becoming the dominant species in our forests more and more."

"They release a lot of energy and particles that can cause projections from centres that are very difficult to control," Xavier Viegas said. "Eucalyptus trees can produce secondary outbreaks, releasing particles that can be projected over great distances and give rise to new fires."

However, experts highlight that the tree is a source of income for the inhabitants of northern and central Portugal, as it is widely used for industrial purposes, mainly for paper pulp, firewood and timber.

"Eucalyptus is a fast-growing species. So in 12 years, you have a mature tree," Conceição Caldeira said. "That's not the case with most of the trees we have, so it does have an important economic return for people and it has to be seen as that."