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Firefighters battle Powys wildfires for fifth day as public urged to stay away

It is unclear how the fire started or grew so quickly. Photograph: Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue ServiceView image in fullscreenIt is unclear how the fire started or grew so quickly. Photograph: Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue ServiceFirefighters battle Powys wildfires for fifth day as public urged to stay awayMid and West Wales fire and rescue service has been trying to extinguish fires in Elan valley since Sunday

Firefighters are struggling to control wildfires raging though the scenic Elan valley in mid-Wales for a fifth day.

The Mid and West Wales fire and rescue service has been working to extinguish fires in and around the Powys beauty spot since Sunday. It is not yet clear how much damage the biodiverse area has suffered: 80% of the valley is designated as sites of special scientific interest, raising fears for flora and fauna.

A helicopter has been deployed to tackle fires still burning fiercely near Claerwen dam and Teifi Pools, the fire and rescue service said, urging the public to stay away from the area. Hafod Estate, a National Trust estate near Pontarfynach (Devil’s Bridge) has been closed until further notice.

Sorcha Lewis, a farmer focused on nature-friendly farming, published pictures to social media of the damage the fires had caused to the ffridd – the “mosaic ecosystem” of sloping areas lying between lowland pasture and open mountain grazing.

“I was concerned for the trees … there was concern it may get into the wood but the fire service were monitoring that,” she wrote in a post. “In my past I have mapped the fires but never been in the brunt of one. Brian [Lewis’s husband] thinks it may be 40 years since there has been a fire here.”

The Elan valley, sometimes known as the Welsh Lake District, is home to 70 sq miles (181 sq km) of dams and reservoirs, built by the Victorians to supply clean water to Birmingham.

It is unclear how the fire started or grew so quickly. Richard Preece, the duty tactical manager at Natural Resources Wales, said: “We will continue to support emergency services across Wales to help tackle fires on land in our care, and in protected landscapes like the Elan valley. The current dry weather has significantly increased the fire risk.”

2025 was the worst year on record for wildfires in the UK, according to the Global Wildfire Information System. By November last year, wildfires had burned 47,026 hectares (116,204 acres) across the UK – the largest area in any year since monitoring began in 2012, and more than double the area burned in the record-breaking summer of 2022.

Separately, firefighters have entered a second day tackling a huge commercial waste blaze in an industrial site in Port Talbot.

Read original at The Guardian

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