Civil Protection recorded 1,104 incidents by the end of Monday, 300 more in the last few hours. The North was the most affected region. Eight districts are under an orange warning.
2h ago. Civil Protection recorded 1,104 incidents

Context & Explainers
An orange warning is the second-highest level in IPMA's four-tier color-coded weather alert system (green → yellow → orange → red). It signals potentially dangerous weather or sea conditions that could cause significant damage or pose a risk to life.
Orange warnings are issued for conditions such as heavy rainfall, strong winds (gusts above 100 km/h), extreme heat, significant snowfall, or high waves (typically 5+ meters). They are district-specific and time-limited.
When an orange warning is active, residents should avoid unnecessary travel, stay away from coastal areas and riverbanks, secure outdoor objects, and follow guidance from civil protection authorities. Schools and transport services may be affected. Orange warnings often trigger preventive measures by local councils and civil protection services.
Civil Protection (Proteção Civil) is Portugal's national system for preventing, preparing for, and responding to disasters and emergencies — from wildfires and floods to earthquakes and storms.
The system is coordinated by the ANEPC (Autoridade Nacional de Emergência e Proteção Civil), which issues warnings, activates response plans, and coordinates firefighters, police, military, and municipal services. During major events, the ANEPC can activate the SIOPS (Sistema Integrado de Operações de Proteção e Socorro), a unified command structure for managing multi-agency responses.
Portugal's Civil Protection framework operates at three levels — national, district, and municipal — each maintaining its own emergency plans. The system has been under ongoing reform, with emergency associations pushing for clearer single-command structures to reduce confusion between responders during major incidents.
During weather emergencies, Proteção Civil issues safety advisories, may close roads and access routes, and coordinates rescue operations. Residents should follow official ANEPC guidance and call 112 for emergencies.










