
Vassilis Kikilias, the Greek minister of climate crisis and civil protection, told reporters: “During this time 667 fires erupted, that is more than 60 fires a day, almost all over the country. Unfortunately, the majority were ignited by human hand, either by criminal negligence or intent.
Kikilias
said that, in certain places, blazes had broken out at numerous points in close
proximity at the same time, suggesting the involvement of arsonists intent on
spreading fires further.
According
to report, most of the 667 fires that have erupted across Greece in recent
weeks were started “by human hand”, the country’s senior climate crisis
official has said.
As the
Mediterranean country emerges from an unprecedented, 15-day period of
heatwave-induced infernos, the scale of the destruction is finally being laid
bare.
While
weather conditions have been different from any other year – with experts
calling the first three weeks of July the hottest on record – most of the fires
could have been prevented, the government claimed on Friday.
Greek minister
added: “The difference with other years were the weather conditions. Climate
change, which yielded a historic and unprecedented heatwave, is here. There
were very few days where the extreme weather was not combined with strong
winds.”
Meteorologists
have never before registered such record-breaking temperatures over such a
prolonged period of time in Greece. With the exception of islands in the Aegean
and Ionian seas, 15-year highs were reached.
This week,
the World Meteorological Organization and Europe’s Copernicus Climate Change
Service described July as the hottest month in recorded history. The UN also
said it was clear that no month had ever been so hot.
António
Guterres, the UN secretary general, called for bold and immediate measures to
cut planet-heating emissions, adding: “The evidence is everywhere. Humanity has
unleashed destruction. This must not inspire despair, but action.”
The fires
have killed three citizens people and injured 74 others. On Wednesday, the
Greek armed forces announced three days of mourning after two air force pilots
were killed as they tried to extinguish flames in their water-bombing plane
before it crashed over the island of Evia.
Almost
twenty thousand people primarily tourists were forced to flee hotels on Rhodes,
the island worst affected by the fires, in a single day. The operation was
described as the biggest evacuation ever carried out in Greece. A state of
emergency was declared in some areas of the popular tourist destination earlier
this week.
While
flames are still raging on Rhodes and the islands of Corfu and Evia, Friday was
the first day that emergency services were not on a state of high alert, with
the fire department saying the situation had finally begun to improve.
Officials said a huge blaze that detonated an ammunition storage facility on
Thursday north of a military airbase in Nea Anchialos, 20km (12 miles) outside
the city of Volos, had been brought under control.
Prof
Christos Zerefos, Greece’s leading expert on atmospheric physics, warned that
the situation would worsen every year. He said: “All strategies will have to be
reviewed (because of) the climate crisis.” Zerefos has long maintained that
annual mean temperatures across the Mediterranean will increase by up to 2C
over the next 30 years.
He
predicted that the climate crisis could cost Greece as much as €700bn (£600bn)
, both in terms of preventive measures and adjusting to the new reality, and
emphasised the importance to Greece of rejuvenating devastated forest
ecosystems.
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