
France's Marseille airport forced to close due to fast-moving wildfire
The local fire service said on X that 168 firefighters had been deployed to fight the blaze of around 30 hectares near the town of Les Pennes-Mirabeau north of Marseille, France's second largest city. Fire engines and helicopters were also being used.
'At this stage, populations must remain confined to residential areas,' the Provence-Alpes-Côte d'Azur prefecture posted on X. 'Close shutters, doors, keep your property clear for emergency services, and do not travel on the roads.'
The high winds prompted evacuations in Les Pennes-Mirabeau, BFM TV reported, citing interviews with locals in the town. The winds could be seen buffeting trees and the on-air reporters.
The spokesperson for Marseille airport said planes had not been taking off or landing since around midday and some flights had been diverted to Nice, Nimes and other regional airports. It was unclear when the airport would re-open.
The fire could be smelled in the centre of Marseille, a resident said, with smoke covering parts of the city.
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France 24
2 hours ago
- France 24
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After sizzling in an early summer heatwave, large swaths of the Mediterranean region are ablaze. Parts of southern France, Greece, Turkey, and Syria have been engulfed in flames in the past few weeks. The city of Marseille is still battling an enormous fire that scorched homes on its outskirts and forced the closure of its airport. Flames disrupted the local economies of the Greek islands of Crete and Evia and forced thousands of people to evacuate their homes. Acres of land were left charred in Turkey's Izmir province, with smoke visible from satellite imagery. And after years of continued political instability, Syria is faced with uncontrollable wildfires that have burned more than three percent of the country's forest cover. These events are part of a broader pattern. The Mediterranean has always been a fire-prone region due to its hot, dry summers and quickly flammable vegetation. But climate change has significantly amplified the occurrences and severity of wildfire. The European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS) said Tuesday that over 214,000 hectares have burned in wildfires across the EU in 2025 so far – more than double the average for this time of year over the past two decades. This escalation is directly linked to climate change, which has made heat-induced wildfires much more likely in the Mediterranean basin. There is no question that without drastic preventative action, summer wildfires will continue to scorch the region. Overall, the number of wildfires are predicted to rise by 50 percent by 2100 – making the flames spreading across the continent not an anomaly, but an inevitability that experts say we are not yet prepared for. A land forged in fire Wildfires have always been part of the life-cycle of the Mediterranean ecosystem. In fact, some species like the plant family Cistaceae have evolved to coexist and even thrive within the summer flames. These unassuming flowering shrubs known as "rock-roses" – occasionally, "children of fire" – are distributed throughout the Mediterranean basin. Their seeds reflect the hardiness of the region in which they thrive: as the dry summer vegetation falls prey to fire, the Cistaceae seed's impermeable coating breaks open and a tiny shoot is born from the soil. Many species of flora in the region do not germinate until fire ignites. But these adaptations are dependent on predictability. Wildfires in the region are evolving – they start earlier in the year and last longer, burning through the native olive trees and Mediterranean shrubbery with increased speed and intensity. Not even the hardy seeds of the Cistaceae will survive through such aggressive fire. This also means that ecosystems will take longer to recover and are likely being fundamentally altered by the increasing frequency and intensity of wildfires. 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Adapting to the recurrent wildfires will certainly mean investing time and money in prevention. Experts say that planned reforestation, building climate-resistant cities, and adapting farming practices to climate conditions could prevent future fires to an extent, or at least reduce the damage. The long-term outlook for the Mediterranean region under the influence of climate change and wildfires suggests a new normal of altered landscapes. Change is inevitable, and it will have a ripple effect on various species of flora and fauna, as well as the cultural heritage of the people so inextricably linked with the land.


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France 24
13 hours ago
- France 24
Marseille wildfire that closed airport, halted trains is 'receding', officials say
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