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Greek ecosystems face increasing fire risk, experts say
- Some 50,000 hectares of forest and vegetation have been left scorched, estimates by the National Observatory of Athens show
- ‘The forests are transformed into agricultural-forest land, the brushwood into scrubland,’ says Nikos Bokaris, head of the Greek union of foresters
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Two weeks of sweltering heat and wildfires have confirmed fears that Greece’s ecosystem is under increasing risk, experts say.
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Some 50,000 hectares (123,500 acres) of forest and vegetation have been left scorched, according to estimates by the National Observatory of Athens.
This makes the month of July the worst in 13 years in terms of burned land, said Charalampos Kontoes, a research director at the observatory.
“It was a dry winter, and spring rains were not enough to maintain” moisture in the soil, Kontoes said.
Civil protection minister Vassilis Kikilias this week said crews had battled more than 660 blazes this month, an average of 50 to 70 fires a day.
Businesses and farms on the tourist islands of Corfu and Rhodes, Greece’s second-largest island of Evia and the countryside near Volos, central Greece, bore the brunt of the damage this year.
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