Firefighters battle biggest blaze in decades in Tenerife - Los Angeles Times
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Firefighters battle biggest blaze in decades on Spanish tourist island of Tenerife

Firefighters working at night
Firefighters and emergency crews battle a blaze advancing toward the town of El Rosario in Tenerife in the Canary Islands.
(Arturo Rodriguez / Associated Press)
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Firefighters battled overnight to try to bring under control the worst wildfire in decades on the Spanish Canary Island of Tenerife, a major tourist destination, officials said Friday.

The fire in the north of the island, which started late Tuesday, has forced the evacuation or confinement of nearly 8,000 people in eight municipalities.

Television images and videos posted on social media showed the flames coming down the hill close to houses in small neighborhoods and a massive cloud of smoke rising from the area.

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The fire blazed in a mountainous, pine-forested area with several municipalities on its flanks, including Arafo and Candelaria to the east and La Orotava to the west.

Army Capt. Rafael San José told Spanish National Television that some progress had been made overnight in stopping the fire’s spread but that rising temperatures during the day would increase difficulties.

The Canary Islands have been in drought for most of the last few years, just like most of mainland Spain. The islands have recorded below-average rainfall in recent years, because of changing weather patterns aggravated by climate change.

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Officials long knew of the risk of a major blaze, but a review of records and interviews shows there was not a fire evacuation plan for Lahaina.

Canary Islands regional President Fernando Clavijo said late Thursday that the blaze, which has scorched 7,900 acres, was still burning strongly but that fortunately there had been no injuries.

He said Friday’s efforts would be crucial to containing the fire.

The north of the island was forecast to have a maximum temperature of 86 degrees Friday with light winds, but temperatures were set to rise further over the weekend.

The flames cover a perimeter of 25 miles, encircling some 10,000 acres of land.

Homes burn in West Kelowna, B.C., as one fire grows sixfold overnight. Another threatens to cut off Yellowknife, forcing thousands to flee Northwest Territories capital.

Nearly 300 firefighters and Spanish army soldiers are in the area, which is in the northeast of the island, some 12 miles away from its main town, Santa Cruz.

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Tenerife is one of Europe’s main tourist destinations. Its tourism office stressed Thursday that the most important tourist areas are far from the fire. Business continues as usual in accommodation establishments, beaches and other tourist sites near the coast and in the midlands, the office said.

But access to the Teide National Park, the most important tourist attraction in Tenerife after the beaches, was closed Thursday evening, and all tourist facilities around the Teide volcano area, including accommodation, were to be evacuated.

Clavijo called the fire the worst in 40 years. He said the combination of extreme temperatures and the fire had turned the area into a virtual oven.

A red-roofed house appears untouched amid the devastation of the Lahaina fire. Its owner says recent renovations may have helped make it fireproof.

The seven-island archipelago sits off the northwest coast of Africa and southwest of mainland Spain.

More than 2,000 people were evacuated in a wildfire on nearby La Palma island last month that affected some 11,000 acres.

Wildfires have burned almost 158,000 acres in Spain in the first seven months of the year, according to Spanish government data. That’s the third-highest figure in the last decade.

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Spain accounted for almost 40% of the 2 million acres burned in the European Union in 2022, according to the European Forest Fire Information System.

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