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Flames to floods: How Europe's devastating wildfires are fueling its next climate crisis

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In recent years, I have all too often found myself passing over an active wildfire when flying from London to my family home in Greece during the summer months. The sky glows an eerie, apocalyptic red, and the scent of smoke fills the cabin. Silence falls as we become unwilling witnesses to a tragic spectacle.

Now are again raging . But the flames themselves are only part of the story. As wildfires become more intense and frequent, they're setting off a dangerous chain reaction—one that also includes a rising risk of devastating floods.

In January 2024, NASA reported that is intensifying wildfire conditions, noting that the frequency of the most extreme wildfires had over the past two decades. While some of this is driven by natural weather variability, is clearly playing a major role. Decades of rising temperatures combined with longer and more have created for wildfires to ignite and spread.

This year, another brutal Mediterranean wildfire season is unfolding right before our eyes, with across the region. As of July 22 2025, —an increase of nearly 78% from the same period last year. The number of fires rose by about 45%, and CO₂ emissions compared to 2024. These are terrifying statistics.

Climate phenomena are closely interconnected

The fires themselves are bad enough. But they're also closely connected to other climate-related extremes, including floods.

Natural hazards often trigger chain reactions, turning one disaster into many. In the case of floods, wildfires play a big role both through and how the land responds to rain.

On the weather side, higher temperatures lead to more extreme rainfall, as warmer air can hold more moisture and fuels stronger storms. Intense wildfires can sometimes get so hot they generate their own weather systems, like —towering storm clouds formed by heat, smoke and water vapor. These clouds can spark during or shortly after the fire.

The damage doesn't end when the flames die down. Satellite data shows that burned land can remain for nearly a year, due to lost vegetation and damaged soil.

As the world warms, the atmosphere is able to hold for every extra degree. Recent temperatures of 40°C or more in Greece suggest a capacity for more downpours and more flooding.

Wildfires also make the land itself . Burnt areas respond much faster to rain, as there is less vegetation to slow down the water. Wildfires also change the soil structure, often making it water-repellent. This means more water runs off the surface, erosion increases, and it takes less rain to trigger a flood.

Under these conditions, a storm expected once every ten years can cause the sort of catastrophic flooding expected only every . Water moves much faster across scorched landscapes without plants to slow it down. Wildfires also leave behind a lot of debris, which can be by fast-moving floodwaters.

While EU-wide data on post-wildfire flood risk is still limited, various case studies from southern Europe offer strong evidence of the connection. In Spain's Ebro River Basin, for example, found that if emissions remain high and is limited, wildfires will increase the probability of high flood risk by 10%.

Nature's ability to regenerate is nothing short of magical, but recovering from a wildfire takes time. Burnt soil takes years to return to normal and, during that time, the . Beyond the impact of wildfires on soil and water, it is important not to overlook the devastating loss of plant and or even entire ecosystems, making the natural world less biodiverse and resilient.

To reduce the frequency and severity of extreme events, we must focus on repairing climate damage. This means moving beyond isolated perspectives and adopting a multi-hazard approach that recognizes how disasters are connected.

Flooding after wildfires is just one example of how one crisis can trigger another. We need to recognize these cascading risks and focus on long-term resilience over short-term fixes.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: Flames to floods: How Europe's devastating wildfires are fueling its next climate crisis (2025, July 31) retrieved 11 September 2025 from /news/2025-07-flames-europe-devastating-wildfires-fueling.html
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