France sends water bombers to tackle wildfire outside Paris


Aerial firefighting plane, De Havilland Canada Dash 8-402 MR, flies as French firefighters battle a wildfire in the Fontainebleau forest in in Noisy-sur-Ecole near Paris, amid a heatwave affecting a large part of the country, France, July 13, 2026. REUTERS/Benoit Tessier

NOISY-SUR-ECOLE, France, July ⁠13 (Reuters) - More than 400 French firefighters worked through the night to contain a ⁠wildfire in the historic Fontainebleau forest south of Paris, and authorities sent ‌two waterbombing planes on Monday to tackle the blaze as a heatwave gripped western Europe.

The fire broke out alongside a highway near Fontainebleau, home to one of France's best-known royal palaces, which once served as ​a hunting lodge and autumn residence for past monarchs. ⁠By midnight, the flames had scorched ⁠more than 800 hectares (1,980 acres), fanned by hot winds.

Just 70 kilometres (43.5 miles) from Paris, ⁠the ‌blaze forced the closure of the A6 highway linking Paris with Lyon and the south. Smaller fires in the area also disrupted high-speed train services.

"The fight ⁠continues today," the French fire service said on X. Local ​residents have been warned ‌that the Canadair planes will have to scoop water from the river Seine, ⁠which flows through ​central Paris.

European countries are worried about increasingly frequent heatwaves and record-breaking temperatures. Most scientists say the fires are driven by climate change, with large swathes of continental Europe parched.

Wildfires have already ⁠ripped through regions of France, Spain, Portugal and Greece, ​charring thousands of hectares of land.

The death toll from a blaze that swept through Spain's southeastern Almeria province rose to 13 over the weekend, when a 93-year-old British woman died ⁠of burns.

Western Europe is gripped by its third prolonged spell of baking temperatures this summer.

A heatwave in late June likely killed thousands of people, with countries reporting more than 10,000 excess deaths. Power supplies were disrupted, schools shut and temperature records broken in France, ​Spain and Britain.

"To have this kind of excess at ⁠this time of year is unusual. It's really high," said Lasse Vestergaard, chief physician at ​Denmark's Statens Serum Institut, which hosts EuroMOMO, a Europe-wide ‌mortality surveillance system.

"It is difficult to explain this ​high excess mortality by anything but the extreme heat," Vestergaard told Reuters.

(Reporting by Benoit Tessier and Sudip-Kar-Gupta; Writing by Richard Lough, editing by Andrei Khalip)

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