Mitsotakis asks locals to conserve power as Greece battles fires and ‘worst heatwave since 1987’

·

Greek Prime Minister, Kyriakos Mitsotakis, warned on Monday that Greece is suffering its ‘worst heatwave since 1987,’ which claimed more than 1,000 lives.

Temperatures reached 45 degrees in inland areas of Greece and are expected to remain high for most of the week.

Speaking during a meeting at a power management center, Mitsotakis called on his fellow citizens to help the country out in its hour of need and conserve their power.

“Everything humanly possible has been done to secure the country’s power supply. But we are also asking consumers to help us,” Mitsotakis said at the event.

READ MORE: Wildfires wreck havoc across Greek villages.

Authorities have asked citizens to minimise power usage at peak times, notably in the afternoon and evening, in order to prevent the electricity grid from being over-burdened.

The intense heat has helped fan wildfires that have destroyed more than 3,000 hectares of pine and olive groves in the country’s west since Saturday.

Deputy Civil Protection Minister, Nikos Hardalias, said there had been 1,584 fires across Greece in July compared to 953 in 2019, and there had been 116 new blazes in just the last 24 hours.

There are fires across Greece at the moment.

“We are no longer talking about climate change but about a climate threat,” Hardalias told Star TV.

The fire near Patras was not fully under control on Monday, with five villages and a seaside town already evacuated. Eight people have also been hospitalised with burns and respiratory problems.

READ MORE: Wildfire in western Greece forces village, beach evacuations.

The fire service on Monday also ordered the precautionary evacuation of a village in the southwestern Peloponnese as it battled a wildfire near Vassilitsi, in the Pylos-Nestor municipality in the region of Messinia.

A fire on Rhodes is largely under control, officials said.

Officials were optimistic, however, that a fire on the island of Rhodes, near the Turkish coast, was on the back foot after more firefighters and resources were deployed overnight.

READ MORE: Massive fire rips through Rhodes, leaves much of the island without power and water.

“Dawn finds Rhodes much better than the day before,” South Aegean Governor, George Hatzimarkos, said in a statement.

He added that the fire fronts were receding and “almost under control.”

Source: RT.

Share:

KEEP UP TO DATE WITH TGH

By subscribing you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

Latest News

Delacroix masterpiece to visit Greece for historic anniversary

Eugène Delacroix’s celebrated 1826 oil painting “Greece on the Ruins of Missolonghi” will travel to Greece this April.

Femicide in Greece: Statistics, stories and the struggle for change

This crime, enacted more often by a partner, ex-partner, or family member, is usually preceded by domestic violence.

Sifnos named top 2026 Greek island escape for Australian travelers

Sifnos, a tranquil jewel of the Cyclades, has been crowned the leading 2026 destination for Australian travelers.

Australia–Cyprus Achievement Awards honour service, scholarship and the next generation

The Australia–Cyprus Achievement Awards were held at the Chau Chak Wing Museum at the University of Sydney on Thursday, February 26.

Odeon of Herodes Atticus to close for three years for major upgrade

The Herodion will shut its doors at the end of July for a three-year restoration program aimed at preserving and modernizing the historic monument,...

You May Also Like

Greek President says Greece, Cyprus hoping for ‘constructive change’ in Turkey’s stance

Greek President, Katerina Sakellaropoulou, underlined the unity and solidarity between Greece and Cyprus in the face of Turkish provocations.

World Blood Donor Day: Nikos explains why he rolls up his sleeves and donates the gift of life

Nikos, has been a blood donor for over 20 years and so far, he has made more than one hundred donations both in Greece and in Australia.

Greece’s island communities face population crisis

The demographic decline in Greece is hitting its islands hard, with Lemnos and Agios Efstratios showing alarming signs of aging populations.