Last month was worst July for global wildfires since 2003: report
Firefighters around the world are battling hundreds of blazes
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
Researchers report that last month was the worst July for wildfires around the world since at least the year 2003.
According to The Guardian, scientists from the European Union's Copernicus Atmosphere Monitoring Service found that the fires released 343 megatonnes of carbon during the month – a measure that's approximately a fifth higher than the previous global peak for July in 2014.
FIRES RAMPAGE THROUGH FORESTS IN GREECE; THOUSANDS EVACUATED
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
"This stands out by a clear margin," Mark Parrington, a senior scientist for the service, told the outlet on Friday. "The July global total this year is the highest since our records began in 2003."
While The Guardian notes that more than half of that number was the result of wildfires in North America and Siberia, the Mediterranean has seen wildfire activity on an astonishing scale.
In Greece, wildfires continued to threaten homes, businesses and parklands amidst the country's worst heat wave in three decades.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
A 38-year-old volunteer firefighter was killed by a falling utility pole just north of Athens on Friday.
Thousands of residents and vacationers have fled and ferries evacuated 1,153 people from a seaside village and beaches on Evia early Saturday morning.
More than 100 raging wildfires broke out in Greece over the past few days and firefighters have arrived from the U.S., France, Ukraine, Cyprus, Croatia, Sweden and Israel to help fight the flames. More were arriving on Saturday from Romania, Switzerland, Egypt and the Czech Republic.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
At least 20 people have been injured in the fire nationwide and three people were arrested Friday on suspicion of starting fires – in two cases intentionally.
In nearby Turkey, hundreds of fires that have been labeled the worst in decades have swept across the southern coast, killing eight people and forcing the evacuations of tens of thousands.
Massive fires have also been burning across Siberia in Russia's north for weeks, endangering several villages on Saturday and prompting evacuations there.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
In Siberia's northeast, 93 active forest fires have burned across 2.8 million acres of Sakha-Yakutia; sweltering temperatures lasting weeks have stoked the fires there as well.
European officials have pinned the number of large fires burning on climate change and Russia has recorded high temperatures that many scientists believe are a direct result of the issue – though experts also blame a 2007 decision to disband a federal aviation network tasked to spot and combat fires.
CALIFORNIA'S DIXIE FIRE LEAVES 8 PEOPLE MISSING AFTER 16 LOCATED, SHERIFF SAYS
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The U.S., which has also seen record-breaking heat and crippling climate-fueled drought this summer, is in similar circumstances and the National Interagency Fire Center reported Friday that 107 large fires have burned more than 2 million acres across the West.
More than 23,700 wildland firefighters and support personnel are working to put out those blazes but wildfire season is far from over in many parts of the world.
This weekend, residents of the state of California are on edge after the Dixie Fire – the largest current wildland blaze in the nation and the third-largest in recorded state history – incinerated much of the gold rush-era town of Greenville and menaced thousands of homes in the northern Sierra Nevada.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The Plumas County Sheriff’s Office told Sacramento's FOX 40 that at least eight area residents were unaccounted for in the fire.
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
The state is on track to surpass last year's fire season: the worst in recent recorded history with more than 4 million acres burned.
{{#rendered}} {{/rendered}}
The National Weather Service said Saturday that while the Northwest is expected to see wet and cooler conditions, above normal temperatures will be observed "from California and the Southwest to the central Plains and into New England" with elevated fire weather conditions issued Saturday for the northern High Plains on Montana and the northern Great Basin on Sunday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.