Portugal
urged to adapt to climate emergency after series of deadly storms
Continuing
extreme weather has caused deaths of 16 people, evacuation of thousands and
destruction of homes
Catarina
Fernandes Martins in Lisbon and Sam Jones in Madrid
Thu 12
Feb 2026 14.40 CET
Portugal
is under pressure to draw up plans to adapt to the climate emergency as the
country continues to be lashed by an unprecedented series of storms that have
killed at least 16 people and left tens of thousands without electricity.
More than
3,000 people were evacuated from the Coimbra area of central Portugal on
Wednesday as the Mondego River reached critical levels, while part of the
country’s main motorway, the A1, collapsed after a dyke on the Mondego gave way
under the weight of flood water.
Hundreds
more people have been displaced across the country since what scientists have
called the “longest train of storms within living memory” began at the end of
January. The extreme weather, which has affected central and southern parts of
the country, has cut off power to 33,000 people and caused an estimated €775m
(£675m) of damage.
Portugal’s
interior minister, Maria Lúcia Amaral, resigned on Tuesday in the face of
mounting anger over her handling of the emergency, saying she felt she did not
have “the personal and political conditions necessary to carry out her duties”.
As the
storms rage on, scientists and experts have criticised the country’s
unwillingness to adapt to the bouts of extreme weather that have been plaguing
the Iberian peninsula in recent years.
“We are
not prepared for the present climate, much less for the future,” said Pedro
Matos Soares, an atmospheric physicist, during a video conference on climate
held by the University of Lisbon’s faculty of sciences this week.
“Portugal
still handles land-use planning thinking about the 19th century or the first
half of the 20th century climate. We have to understand what the climate is
like now and what it will be like in the future. Otherwise, we’re going to have
a problem.”
Nuno
Martins, a professor of architecture and climate adaptation, said that several
of the storms’ victims had died while trying to repair their roofs with donated
tarpaulins in central Portugal, while hundreds more had been injured in falls.
Martins’s
NGO, Building 4Humanity – a team of architects, engineers, and designers – has
been volunteering in central Portugal and put together a manual to teach people
how to repair their roofs safely.
“I was in
the area and saw how desperate people are to save their houses,” he said. “I
was also outside a hospital full of people who were injured after falling from
the roofs. I asked some municipalities to distribute the manual together with
the tarpaulins they were handing out to people, so that they could have some
guidance and a greater awareness of the risks.”
The civil
protection agency has taken up the suggestion and has begun distributing the
manual alongside tarpaulins.
One woman
in the Coimbra region said she understood why people would risk their lives to
try to protect their houses. The woman, who did not wish to be named, said she
believed part of her late mother’s house would eventually collapse.
“I try
not to go inside because I can’t stop crying when I’m there,” she said. “I
understand why people fell from their roofs. They’re desperate. If my legs
allowed, I [would have] done so myself, out of my own desperation. But it’s
very dangerous.”
Portugal’s
centre-right government, which is led by the prime minister, Luís Montenegro,
has faced sustained criticism over its handling of the storms.
“The
resignation of the interior minister is proof the government has failed in its
response to this emergency,” José Luís Carneiro, the general secretary of the
opposition socialist party, told the press after Amaral stepped down.
The
far-right leader André Ventura, who finished second in last weekend’s
presidential election, accused Montenegro of an inability to deal with the
crises that have buffeted Portugal over recent months.
“The
minister’s departure highlights the government’s inability to manage all the
adversities the country has faced, from the fires to the recent storms,” he
said.
Neighbouring
Spain is also suffering from the continuing extreme weather, propmting the
state meteorological office to issue orange and red warnings for the north
coast of the country and warn of waves up to nine metres (30 feet) tall.
Thirty-four
people were taken to hospital in the northeastern region of Catalonia as high
winds forced schools in some areas to close and led to the cancellation of
dozens of flights. One person was critically injured by a tree while two others
were said to be in a serious condition.
An
emergency alert was also sent to people’s phones, warning them to stay indoors
and avoid unnecessary travel. The alert was lifted on Thursday afternoon, but
the regional government urged people to take care in the aftermath of what it
called “an exceptional storm”.
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