Spain's wildfire wave ranks among 2025's worst climate disasters

Spain's 2025 summer wildfires, which razed 400,000 hectares, rank among the world's most devastating climate disasters of the year, according to Christian Aid's annual review. This event continues a pattern of severe climate impacts placing Spain in international vulnerability rankings. Experts link these disasters to the continued expansion of fossil fuels and political delays in climate action.

Christian Aid has described Spain's 2025 wildfire season as “one of its most devastating fire seasons,” with 400,000 hectares of forest destroyed. This disaster joins other global events highlighted in its annual review, such as the January Los Angeles fires, which caused over $60 billion in damages and 31 direct deaths, plus 400 indirect.

Spain has frequently appeared in these rankings: in 2024 for the Valencia DANA floods and in 2023 for drought. “These disasters are not natural. They are the predictable result of the continued expansion of fossil fuels and political delays,” states Joanna Haigh, emeritus professor at Imperial College London and lead IPCC author.

Other impacts include November cyclones in Southeast Asia, with $25 billion in losses and over 1,700 lives lost; summer floods in China; Hurricane Melissa in the Caribbean; and drought in Brazil. In developing countries like Nigeria (May floods) and Congo (April), effects are severe though less economically quantified.

“This year has shown us, once again, the harsh reality of climate collapse,” emphasizes Patrick Watt, CEO of Christian Aid. “These disasters warn us of what awaits if we do not accelerate the phase-out of fossil fuels. The suffering caused by this crisis is a political choice driven by decisions to continue burning fossil fuels, which first and hardest hit the most vulnerable.”

The report notes that climate disasters have cost $28 trillion between 1990 and 2020, and highlights unusual events like Scottish wildfires (47,000 hectares) and Japanese snowstorms.

関連記事

Devastated flooded landscape in northern Philippines after Super Typhoon Uwan, with displaced people and rescuers amid storm debris, highlighting climate crisis effects.
AIによって生成された画像

Super typhoon Uwan devastates northern Philippines amid rising climate risks

AIによるレポート AIによって生成された画像

Super Typhoon Uwan battered northern Philippines in November 2025, causing 25 deaths and displacing over 1.4 million people. The UN praised the country's preparedness but warned of more frequent powerful storms due to the climate crisis. At COP30, delegates discussed the urgent need for adaptation funding.

米国は2025年に気象・気候災害23件で10億ドル超の被害を受け、276人が死亡、総額1150億ドルの損害を出した、とClimate Central。平均以上の出来事の15年連続で、災害は平均10日ごとに発生。年はロサンゼルスの壊滅的な山火事で始まり、複数の地域で激しい嵐と竜巻が発生した。

AIによるレポート

2025年1月、一連の山火事がロサンゼルスを襲い、広大な地域を焼き尽くし、広範な破壊を引き起こした。気候変動要因によって駆動されたこれらの火災は、直接数十人を殺害し、煙曝露により数百人以上を死なせた。この出来事は地域における環境リスクの増大を浮き彫りにした。

最近のNational Bureau of Economic Researchの報告書は、アメリカの家族が気候関連の年間費用として400~900ドルに直面していることを明らかにした。これらのコストは、保険、エネルギー、税金、健康に影響を与える極端な気象現象に起因する。研究は、特に災害多発地域での負担増大を強調している。

AIによるレポート

米国西部での数十年間の火災抑制により、深刻な火災不足が生じ、数百万ヘクタールの土地が大規模火災に脆弱になっています。AGU 2025年年次大会で発表された新研究では、歴史的に3800万ヘクタールが燃焼遅れで、地域の74%が影響を受けていると推定されています。科学者らは、温暖化と乾燥化の中で森林の健康を回復するため、管理火災への転換を求めています。

A new Desertification Atlas reveals that 43.35% of Spanish territory is degraded, with desertification affecting 60.94% of arid zones. The study, produced by the University of Alicante and CSIC, highlights the most vulnerable regions such as Murcia and the Canary Islands. Water management is presented as key to mitigating the problem's advance.

AIによるレポート

An intense rainstorm has battered southeast Spain, causing floods, evacuations, and one death in Andalucía, with red alerts in Murcia and Valencia. In Málaga, the Guadalhorce River recorded a historic flood, and two people remain missing. Authorities issue Es-Alert messages and suspend activities to mitigate risks.

 

 

 

このウェブサイトはCookieを使用します

サイトを改善するための分析にCookieを使用します。詳細については、プライバシーポリシーをお読みください。
拒否