
Parliament Approves €144.1 Million for Spain, Romania, and Cyprus After Natural Disasters
The European Parliament has sanctioned €144.1 million in EU disaster assistance for Spain, Romania, and Cyprus, providing aid to communities impacted by wildfires, floods, and heatwaves in 2025. This decision underscores the pressing reality of climate-related emergencies, which challenge public services, rural livelihoods, and inter-member state solidarity.
MEPs endorsed the fund release from the European Union Solidarity Fund with a vote of 642 to 13, with one abstention, during Tuesday’s plenary session in Strasbourg.
Spain will receive the largest portion, €120.55 million, following severe wildfires in 2025. Romania is allocated €14.34 million after regional floods, and Cyprus will get €9.21 million due to wildfires in the Limassol and Paphos areas.
Funding for Repairs and Essential Services
The funds aim to support emergency and recovery work, including restoring essential infrastructure and public services, clean-up efforts, temporary housing, and rescue-related costs.
Spain and Cyprus have already received advance payments of €30 million and €2.3 million respectively to aid initial recovery efforts. The full allocation offers national and local authorities the resources to repair damage that exceeded environmental loss in many areas.
According to the Commission’s assessment, Spain faced extended drought, extreme heat, and multiple severe wildfires in 2025, with at least 243 forest fires recorded across 16 autonomous communities. The most devastating wave began on 8 August, resulting in eight deaths.
In Romania, heavy rainfall from late May to early June caused flooding in the Centru, Sud Muntenia, and Nord Est regions. The Praid Salt Mine was severely affected, with floodwater compromising infrastructure integrity.
Cyprus experienced two significant wildfires in July 2025, forcing the evacuation of thousands, resulting in two deaths, and destroying nearly 900 private properties, while disrupting education and healthcare services.
A Broader Resilience Challenge
The European Union Solidarity Fund is intended for post-disaster relief, not long-term climate adaptation. Since 2002, it has provided over €10 billion for disaster recovery across EU member and accession countries.
However, Tuesday’s vote comes at a time when extreme weather is increasing demands on Europe’s emergency systems. Recent heat and wildfire warnings in Europe have sparked debate about the preparedness of health services, infrastructure, and rural areas for hotter, unpredictable summers.
The 2025 incidents highlight uneven disaster impacts. Fires in rural Spain destroyed both livelihoods and landscapes, while flooding in Romania affected public infrastructure and homes. In Cyprus, damage extended to homes, farms, schools, and health facilities.
This fund is politically significant, notwithstanding the modest sums compared to total damages. The Commission accepted direct damage estimates of over €4.3 billion in Spain, €573.59 million in Romania, and €252.68 million in Cyprus, according to its mobilisation proposal.
The immediate impact of the vote is practical: enabling recovery funding. The larger question is whether Europe can combine post-disaster support with proactive investment in prevention, land management, resilient infrastructure, and protection for those most vulnerable to heat, fire, and floods.













Leave a Reply