Update: France’s huge wildfire is under control but will still burn for days, authorities say

Update: France’s huge wildfire is under control but will still burn for days, authorities say
A firefighter is silhouetted while conducting a water rescue operation at sunset amid land scorched by a wildfire near Saint-Laurent-de-la-Cabrerisse, southern France, August 7, 2025.

PARIS, Aug 8 (NNN-AGENCIES) — France‘s biggest wildfire in decades will burn for several more days even though it has been brought under control, authorities said Friday as hundreds of firefighters kept up a battle against the flames.

The giant blaze in the southern department of Aude has burned through more than 17,000 hectares of land – an area bigger than Paris – killing one person, injuring 13 and destroying dozens of homes.

About 2,000 firefighters are still on duty around the blaze, which was declared under control on Thursday night.

The fire will not be “declared extinguished for several days”, said Christian Pouget, the prefect for Aude. “There is still a lot of work to be done.”

Authorities have banned access to the forests that were devastated by the fire until at least Sunday.

They said that roads in the zone were too dangerous because of fallen electricity lines and other hazards.

Pouget said that about 2,000 people forced to flee the flames had still not been allowed back to their homes.

Hundreds of people are sleeping in school gyms and village halls across the region.

The fire is the biggest in France’s Mediterranean region for at least 50 years, according to government monitors. The southern region suffers more than others from wildfires.

At its most intense, the flames were going through around 1,000 hectares of land per hour, according to authorities in the nearby city of Narbonne.

Two days of strong and changing winds made the blaze difficult to predict.

A 65-year-old woman, who had refused to evacuate, was found dead in her scorched house, while 13 people were injured, 11 of them firefighters.

The wildfire is a “catastrophe on an unprecedented scale”, Prime Minister Francois Bayrou said Wednesday during a visit to the affected region.

“What is happening today is linked to global warming and linked to drought,” Bayrou said.

Environment minister Agnès Pannier-Runacher wrote on X Thursday that the fire was the largest in France since 1949.

The country has already seen around 9,000 wildfires this summer, mainly close to its Mediterranean coast.

Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent, with temperatures increasing at twice the speed of the global average since the 1980s, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. — NNN-AGENCIES

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