Mapa Incêndios Portugal -

As climate change fuels longer and more intense wildfire seasons, Portugal has become a testing ground for digital public safety tools. Leading the charge is Mapa Incêndios Portugal – the official government platform (managed by ICNF, IPMA, and ANEPC) designed to track active fires in near real-time. But how well does it actually work when the smoke is rising? After using it extensively during the critical months of June through October, here is my full review. What Is It? Mapa Incêndios is a web-based GIS dashboard (no dedicated app) that visualizes every rural fire reported in mainland Portugal. It pulls data from the national fire dispatch system, satellite hot-spot detection (from NASA’s FIRMS and EFFIS), and weather stations. The goal is simple: give citizens, civil protection, and tourists a single source of truth for ongoing ignitions, fire perimeters, and risk levels. The Good (What Works Well) 1. Real-Time Data Integration The map refreshes every 10–15 minutes. When a fire is reported, a red flame icon appears with the time of alert, responsible corporation (e.g., "CDOS Leiria"), and number of firefighting assets (aircraft, ground teams). During the 2023 and 2024 fire seasons, I observed updates arriving before local news reports.

The interface defaults to Portuguese. While icons are intuitive, key alerts, fire statuses, and risk descriptors are not fully translated into English or French. For the 4+ million tourists in Algarve and Alentejo during fire season, this reduces usability significantly. mapa incêndios portugal

Active fire boundaries are often shown as rough polygons based on satellite detection – which can lag 1–3 hours. Ground truth (from firefighters) is sometimes missing. As a result, you might see a “contained” fire that still has active flanks, or a “large” polygon where the fire has already moved on. As climate change fuels longer and more intense

Essential for situational awareness, insufficient for emergency response. After using it extensively during the critical months

While there’s no app, the site works reasonably well on phones. Pinch-to-zoom, click icons for details, and share direct links to specific coordinates – useful for WhatsApp groups in rural areas.