Azcón in Alcampell: fire already reaches four thousand hectares and calls for caution

Published on June 26, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The President of Aragon, Jorge Azcón, has traveled to the advanced command post in Alcampell to closely monitor the evolution of the wildfire, which has already affected 4,000 hectares. Although the exact burned area is still unknown, the leader has called on the population to exercise extreme caution and hopes that the wind will subside and temperatures will drop to slow the advance of the incident. Homes and crops in the area remain at risk.

Aerial view of a wildfire advancing across dry farmland near Alcampell, flames consuming crops and approaching isolated farmhouses, smoke plumes rising into a hazy orange sky, a mobile command center with antennas and monitoring screens visible on a dirt road, a helicopter dropping water in the background, cinematic photorealistic visualization, dramatic lighting with dark smoke and bright fire glow, ultra-detailed terrain and vegetation, motion blur on rotor blades, realistic heat haze distortion, tense emergency scene

Drones and satellites: technology at the service of firefighting 🛰️

In the fight against fire, technology plays a key role. Emergency teams use drones with thermal cameras to detect hot spots and monitor the perimeter's evolution during the night. Additionally, satellite images from the Copernicus program allow technicians to calculate the affected area in real time. This data is integrated into geographic information systems that help plan defense lines and prioritize the most vulnerable areas, optimizing available resources on the ground.

The wind doesn't read speeches: meteorology rebels 🌬️

While Azcón asks the wind for kindness and a bit of coolness, the weather seems to have declared war on Aragon. Gusts are blowing strongly, and temperatures stubbornly hover near forty degrees. One almost expects the president to pull out a giant fan to blow in the opposite direction. Meanwhile, we must trust that the sky will take pity on the farmers, who already see their crops turning into smoke before reaching the market.