Driver killed and motorway collapses as storms hit France, Portugal and Spain

Western Europe is grappling with severe consequences following the onslaught of Storm Nils, which has unleashed a trail of destruction across France, Portugal, and Spain. The extreme weather event has resulted in fatalities, critical infrastructure damage, and massive disruptions to daily life.

In a tragic incident in western France, a lorry driver lost his life after a tree, felled by ferocious winds, crashed through his vehicle’s windscreen. The storm’s fury left approximately 900,000 households without power. Southern regions of France were placed on red alert as wind gusts reached a devastating 162 km/h (100 mph) near the south-west coast. The threat extended to the Alps, where several ski resorts, including La Plagne, preemptively closed due to an extreme risk of avalanches.

Portugal faced a catastrophic infrastructure failure when a segment of its vital A1 motorway, a key artery connecting Lisbon and Porto, collapsed. The breach occurred near Coimbra after the Mondego River overflowed its banks, overwhelming the Casais do Campo dyke and washing away a 10-meter section of the road. Although the stretch was closed prior to the collapse, Infrastructure Minister Miguel Pinto Luz, who visited the site, projected repairs would take several weeks. This event is part of a broader pattern of destructive weather; the government reported that the country received 20% of its average annual rainfall in just one week, following weeks of similar conditions that have severely battered national infrastructure.

The political fallout from the prolonged crisis has already begun, with Interior Minister Maria Lucia Amaral resigning amid criticism of her handling of the situation. The storms have caused billions of euros in damage and several fatalities. Scientists are drawing a direct line to climate change, noting that the increasing frequency and intensity of such extreme weather events on the Iberian Peninsula are linked to rising greenhouse gas emissions.

Neighboring Spain experienced significant transport chaos. Schools were suspended in Catalonia, the Basque country was on red alert for 10-meter waves, and winds of 148 km/h were recorded in Alicante. Accidents related to the storm injured multiple people, including four workers clearing fallen trees in Barcelona and a pedestrian hit by a collapsing wall. Dozens of flights were canceled at Barcelona’s El Prat airport. In a separate incident near Cáceres, a woman required rescue after her car fell into a sudden sinkhole.

French Transport Minister Philippe Tabarot paid tribute to the deceased driver and issued a stark public appeal, urging citizens to ‘exercise utmost caution when travelling and check with their transport operator before any journey.’