Fire of 'exceptional magnitude' burns through France's Fontainebleau forest, 1,900 hectares destroyed
A wildfire France's interior ministry called 'very virulent' swept through the Fontainebleau forest in Seine-et-Marne, south of Paris, starting Sunday afternoon July 12; by July 14 it had destroyed more than 1,900 hectares, forced mass evacuations, closed the A6 motorway, and brought 850 firefighters, 200 vehicles, and six aircraft into action, with two people arrested on suspicion of arson
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Summary
A wildfire described by French officials as of "exceptional magnitude" tore through the Fontainebleau forest in Seine-et-Marne, about 60 km south-east of Paris, beginning Sunday afternoon July 12. By July 14, more than 1,900 hectares had burned, roughly 9 percent of the entire forest massif. France's government deployed 850 firefighters, 200 vehicles, and six aircraft, including waterbombers. The A6 motorway was closed in both directions, train lines were disrupted, and local residents and horses were evacuated. Two people were arrested on suspicion of starting the blaze, with a criminal inquiry opened. France's Eiffel Tower, Louvre, and Orsay close early as France's third 2026 heatwave puts 22 million people under red alert and shortens a Tour de France stage for the first time heat waves add context: the fire struck during the country's third heat wave since May, worsening conditions for crews fighting to contain it.
The split
French and pan-European outlets focused on the scale of emergency response and Macron's framing of the event as exceptional. Al Jazeera and CBS News placed the fire within a broader pattern of European climate stress, noting the ongoing heat waves and multiple simultaneous wildfires across the continent. The South China Morning Post and the Asian press highlighted the arson angle and human accountability, connecting the arrests to a wider European wildfire season shaped partly by deliberate ignition.
By the numbers
- 1,900+, hectares burned by July 14
- 850, firefighters deployed at peak
- 200, vehicles and 6 aircraft in use
- 2, people arrested on arson suspicion
- 3rd, heat wave to hit France's Ile-de-France region since May 2026
- 60 km, distance from the Fontainebleau forest to central Paris
Why it matters
France's Fontainebleau forest is a UNESCO World Heritage site and one of Europe's most historically significant forests. The fire's scale, combined with France's third consecutive summer heat wave, signals a deteriorating pattern of wildfire risk close to a major European capital. The arson suspicion means this is not solely a climate story.
What to watch
- Whether firefighters can fully contain the blaze and prevent further spread toward populated areas.
- The criminal investigation's findings on how and whether the fire was deliberately set.
- French government response on forest-fire prevention and air-asset capacity after Fontainebleau.
- Broader European wildfire coordination as multiple countries face simultaneous blazes this summer.