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Portugal rushes to clear storm debris before the wildfire season arrives

The'midsummer heat' is already baking some parts of Portugal. Army units and forestry agents are racing to clear the woody debris from storms that occurred in early 2026, before wildfire season starts.

The central area of Serta, one of the hardest hit by the storms, is where heavy bulldozers in army drab are working deep in the forest to remove tons of fallen trees and broken branches that could be used as fuel in any fire.

Wildfire expert Jose Miguel Pereira said that the windstorms left "a totally abnormal amount of fuel on the ground", which increased the risk of dangerous and intense fires.

Portugal consistently has the highest percentage of land that is burned in the European Union compared to its size. Last summer, Spain & Portugal experienced a 16-day heatwave that was the most intense ever recorded and contributed to devastating forest fires. Scientists claim that extreme weather events like this are more common due to climate change.

Portugal's Special Rural Firefighting Response System has been strengthened this year. It now includes 15,149 personnel, 3463 vehicles, and 81 airplanes.

The Agriculture Minister Jose Manuel Fernandes said that 17,000 km (10.563 miles) worth of forest roads have been cleared, but there is still more work to do clearing private plots before the end of June, when landowners will face heavy fines if they fail to comply.

A law approved this year allows authorities to enter private land plots which have not been cleared from woody debris.

Owners representing 40,000 ha of land have already agreed that they will do the cleaning up.

Fernandes told RTP on Thursday: "Our plea is to do it quickly." "We?have an incredibly complicated summer ahead of us." We've never had as many tools at our disposal, or put in so much effort to prevent.

(source: Reuters)