The great forest fires that have marked France since the deadly “great fire” of 1949

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With its 16.9 million hectares covering 30% of metropolitan territory, the French forest suffers an average of 4,000 fires each year which destroy a total of 11,000 hectares, the vast majority in the southern half of the country.

Like the fires that have ravaged in Gironde, since Tuesday, nearly 11,000 hectares of pines, forest fires are a recurring scourge in France.

With its 16.9 million hectares covering 30% of metropolitan territory, the French forest suffers an average of 4,000 fires each year which destroy a total of 11,000 hectares, the vast majority in the southern half of the country (figures from the Ministry of Ecological Transition over the period 2007-2018).

Reminder of the great forest fires that have marked France since the deadly “great fire” of 1949 which had already ravaged the forest south of Bordeaux.

SEE ALSO – Fire in Gironde: “The fire was rather well contained last night”, according to the sub-prefect of Langon

1949: the “great fire”

Starting on August 19 from a sawmill in Saucats, south of Bordeaux, a terrible fire ravaged 50,000 hectares of pines in a few days, killing 82 people in its path.

The victims are mainly water and forest agents, volunteer firefighters and soldiers who came to fight the flames. This “great fire” in the Landes de Gascogne is to date the deadliest forest fire in France.

1976: Palmyra

The furnace of summer 76, the extreme drought and the gesture of an arsonist transform the forest of La Palmyre (Charente-Maritime) into an instant fire, on August 20, at the peak of the tourist season.

Hundreds of vacationers, stuck between the flames and the ocean, are evacuated from the beach by a noria of boats. That summer, fires burned 80,000 hectares in France, a record!

1989: Lacanau and Marseilles

The month of July 1989, particularly hot and dry, was conducive to the outbreak of fire throughout the south. On July 20, a gigantic fire ravaged 5,000 hectares of pines near the Lacanau pond (Gironde) and forced the evacuation of thousands of holidaymakers.

Night view of the Saint-Antoine district taken on the night of August 28 to 29, 1989 during a violent forest fire that devastated one hundred hectares in the northern districts of Marseille. DOMINIQUE FAGET / AFP

At the end of August, it was Marseille’s turn to be licked by the flames. On the 29th, 10,000 hectares went up in smoke, in less than 24 hours, in the South-East and in Corsica.

1990: 23,000 hectares destroyed

The summer of 1990 was terrible for the Massif des Maures (Var): 12,500 hectares were destroyed at the end of August. In total, the fires ravaged 23,000 hectares of vegetation between Marseille and Nice from August 21 to 25.

2003: the Moors and the Esterel

At the end of July 2003, fires of criminal origin once again ravaged the Massif des Maures, causing the death of four people and leading to the evacuation of 6,000 holidaymakers and residents.

Photo taken on July 28, 2003 in Plan-de-la-Tour, of the fire which completely destroyed eighteen houses, fifteen having been partially destroyed, in the Massif des Maures. ERIC ESTRADE / AFP
Firefighters intervened on July 28, 2003 in Plan-de-la-Tour, during a fire of criminal origin. ERIC ESTRADE / AFP

A month later, in Cogolin still in the Var, three firefighters perish in their truck surrounded by flames. That summer, 20% of the Maures and the Esterel were destroyed.

The 2003 summer season was just as disastrous for Corsica: 13,000 hectares burned and the Cap Corse peninsula particularly damaged.

2009: Corsican drought

Firefighters block the road near the village of Aullène in Corsica on July 25, 2009. STEPHAN AGOSTINI / AFP
A Canadair water bomber dumps water over the Alta-Rocca region, near the village of Aullene in Corsica, July 24, 2009. STEPHAN AGOSTINI / AFP

A period of drought makes fires dreadful at the end of July 2009 in Corsica. Gravona valley, north of Ajaccio, Sartène and Aullène regions: more than 5300 hectares go up in smoke.

2016: at the gates of Marseille

France mobilized 1,500 firefighters on August 10, 2016 to deal with wildfires in the countryside north of Marseilles that gutted buildings and forced more than 1,000 people to flee their homes. BORIS HORVAT / AFP
A man stands near his burnt house following a fire that devastated some 3,300 hectares in the region in Vitrolles, north of Marseille, on August 11, 2016. BERTRAND LANGLOIS / AFP

Fanned by the mistral, several fires quickly spread north of Marseille. They arrive on August 10 at the gates of the Marseille city. The fire destroyed 3300 hectares, 25 buildings, a school group and a high school, fortunately deserted.

2017: refugees in Bormes

At the end of July, in the space of a few hours, a series of fires fanned by violent winds in Haute-Corse, Vaucluse, Bouches-du-Rhône and Var reduced more than 7,000 hectares to ashes.

Evacuees take shelter on the beach and watch a fire burning the forest in Bormes-les-Mimosas, southern France, at sunrise, July 26, 2017. MARION LEFLOUR / AFP

On July 26, the flames threaten the seaside resort of Bormes-les-Mimosas (Var) and 10,000 people must be evacuated. Hundreds of holidaymakers spent the night in their cars or on the beach to escape the flames.

2021: two deaths in the Moors

A violent fire fanned by a swirling wind set part of the Massif des Maures in the Var, between Cogolin and Le Luc, shortly after August 15.

Smoke rises behind the Val de Gilly (Var) as a forest fire rages in southeastern France on August 17, 2021.
VALERY HACHE / AFP

More than 6,000 hectares go up in smoke in the hinterland of Saint-Tropez, 10,000 people are evacuated and two charred bodies are found in a house in the town of Grimaud.


SEE ALSO – Heat wave: “The conditions are optimal for fire starts”, explains Tristan Vey

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