SHARE
COPY LINK

VALENCIA

Faulty electrical appliance caused high-rise fire in Spain’s Valencia

A huge fire which ripped through a residential high-rise block in Spain's Mediterranean port city of Valencia last month, killing ten, was probably caused by a faulty electrical appliance, authorities said Monday.

Faulty electrical appliance caused high-rise fire in Spain's Valencia
Firefighters battle the huge fire raging through a multistorey residential block in Valencia on February 22, 2024. (Photo by Jose Jordan / AFP)

“Forensic police have established that the causes of the fire were accidental and that it was probably caused by an electrical appliance in one of the apartments,” Maria Jose Catalá, mayor of Spain’s third-largest city, told reporters.

Catalá said an ongoing investigation has still to determine why the blaze, which devastated a 14-storey high-rise and an adjoining 10-storey block which together housed 138 flats, spread so quickly.

“The first results of the national police investigation show the fire probably originated from inside the kitchen and that it was caused by a household appliance,” Prefect Pilar Bernabe told the media.

READ ALSO: How safe are Spanish buildings when it comes to fire standards?

The fire, which spread lightning fast, sending clouds of black smoke high into the air over the western Campanar district, started on one of the middle floors and within 30 minutes had consumed the entire building, fuelled by strong winds of up to 60 kilometres (40 miles) per hour.

The tragedy left some 450 residents homeless.

Previously, some experts had suggested the fact the building was covered with highly flammable cladding could have accounted for the rapid spread of the blaze, drawing parallels with the 2017 Grenfell Tower disaster in London when 72 people died in a tower block fire blamed on highly-inflammable cladding.

Three days following the Valencia blaze, a child and two adults died in another fire inside a high-rise residential block in the Spanish seaside town of Villajoyosa some 150 kilometres (90 miles) further down Spain’s east coast.

Member comments

Log in here to leave a comment.
Become a Member to leave a comment.

WILDFIRE

Wildfire rages in Spain’s Alicante as temperatures rise

A forest fire that started in abnormally hot temperatures has burned through more than 500 hectares (1,235 acres) near Spain's Costa Blanca and forced 180 people to flee their homes, officials said Monday.

Wildfire rages in Spain's Alicante as temperatures rise

The fire began on Sunday near Tárbena in the Valencia region (Alicante province) as temperatures reached 30 degrees Celcius (86 degrees Fahrenheit), which is unusually high for the season.

Heat, wind and low humidity fuelled the blaze which media reports said may have started with an agricultural fire.

“The fire is still active” after a “complicated” night for firefighters, the region’s emergency services wrote on X, the former Twitter, saying the blaze had destroyed “more than 500 hectares (1,235 acres)” of land.

“Around 180 people have been evacuated” from the two worst-hit areas, Pilar Bernabe, the central government representative in Valencia, told public television.

Eight air units battled the blaze alongside firefighters and troops from the UME military emergency unit which is called in to help with larger fires.

According to the AEMET national weather service, temperatures rose above 30C in more than 65 areas across Spain on Saturday, including places as far north as the Pyrenees, Galicia and the Castilla y Leon region.

Tárbena is about 20 kilometres (12 miles) from the coast, near the coastal resort of Benidorm.

In 2022, some 500 wildfires destroyed huge more than 300,000 hectares of land in Spain, a record in Europe, according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS).

READ ALSO: Heat records for April already broken across Spain

SHOW COMMENTS