Madrid.- A total of 391,581 hectares have burned in
Spain so far in 2025 in 230 fires detected in various parts of the country, according to data updated this Wednesday by the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).
With that last estimate released this Wednesday -before noon-, Spain is approaching 400,000 hectares ravaged by fire throughout the year, in the midst of a wave of forest fires, the most serious of the century, which gives no respite in a large part of the territory, especially in Castilla y León, Galicia (in the north of the country) and Extremadura (in the west).
The figure released yesterday (382,607 hectares) already exceeded the size of the island of Mallorca (364,000 hectares) and, according to the latest report from the State Coordination Committee (Cecod), has already caused the evacuation of more than 33,750 people.
According to the latest data provided by EFFIS, a tool dependent on the Copernicus program, the European Union's (EU) Earth observation and monitoring program, the burned area this year far exceeds the 42,615 ha scorched in 2024 in 219 wildfires.
It is also greater than the area that burned in 2023 (91,220 hectares in 371 fires) and exceeds the figures recorded in 2022, until now considered the worst year in terms of burned area in forest fires in the country: 306,555 hectares in 493 fires.
Spain is currently battling more than 20 active fires in operational situation 2 due to their severity, although the State Meteorological Agency (
Aemet) announced yesterday that the danger level is decreasing in areas of the north and east of the Peninsula after an improvement in weather conditions and the forecast of "locally very strong" storms.
Despite this, the "very high or extreme" risk remains in a large part of Galicia and nearby areas, as well as in Extremadura and the southeast of the territory, due to the strong winds that can complicate the extinction efforts in the active fires.