FONTAINEBLEAU, FRANCE / RankWire.AI / – Wildfires have burned more than 1,300 hectares of the historic Fontainebleau forest southeast of Paris, forcing evacuations and a major aerial response. Firefighters had not contained the blazes by late Monday after flames spread across separate parts of the forest massif. Emergency crews reported no deaths or injuries, while authorities described property damage as limited. The scale of the blaze has made it an exceptional event for the Paris region, where large forest fires remain uncommon.

The main fire started late Sunday near Noisy-sur-École and spread toward Achères-la-Forêt and Le Vaudoué. It covered about 1,200 hectares by 10 p.m. Monday. A second fire broke out Monday afternoon near La Faisanderie, several kilometres from Fontainebleau, and affected roughly 120 hectares. Together, the outbreaks pushed the burned area beyond 1,300 hectares within little more than a day. Crews continued working across both zones as smoke covered roads and nearby communities.
More than 850 firefighters joined the response, supported by four Canadair water bombers, three water-dropping helicopters and two Dash aircraft. Military units also reinforced local emergency services. Aircraft completed 187 drops during Monday’s operations, including water collection from the Seine. The deployment marked the first use of Canadair aircraft against a wildfire in the greater Paris area. Ground teams protected homes, controlled access routes and moved equipment through forest tracks while crews monitored the changing fire perimeter.
Mass evacuations and transport closures
About 900 residents left homes in Achères-la-Forêt and Le Vaudoué as flames approached populated areas. Local authorities opened reception centres and arranged temporary shelter for displaced families. The Seine-et-Marne prefecture kept the A6 motorway closed through the affected sector late Monday, disrupting the main route between Paris, Lyon and southern France. Smaller fires also interrupted high-speed rail traffic, although services later resumed. Police and gendarmes blocked local roads to keep emergency lanes clear.
Investigators examined around 10 ignition points within a radius of about one kilometre. Authorities detained two people in connection with the Fontainebleau fires, but they had not established responsibility or a motive. The inquiry continued alongside firefighting and evacuation operations. Gendarmes deployed about 100 personnel to secure evacuated areas, control traffic and prevent unauthorized access. A gendarmerie helicopter supported teams on the ground, while officers guarded roadblocks around Noisy-sur-École and nearby villages.
Historic forest faces extensive damage
The National Forestry Office closed forest roads, hiking trails and affected parcels in Fontainebleau and Trois-Pignons through July 15. The restrictions covered southern and western sections of the state forest, including areas near Larchant and Villiers-sous-Grez. Fontainebleau’s wider forest massif spans more than 20,000 hectares and surrounds one of France’s best-known royal sites. The landscape includes woodland, heath, wetlands and sandstone formations, and it forms part of the Fontainebleau and Gâtinais biosphere reserve.
Wind gusts and peat-rich ground complicated the response by allowing heat to remain beneath the surface. Fire crews maintained operations through the night after Monday’s rapid expansion. France had recorded nearly 10,000 vegetation fire starts since the beginning of the season, with about 32,000 hectares burned nationwide. The Fontainebleau emergency unfolded during a severe heatwave that placed the greater Paris region under the highest alert level. Road closures and forest access restrictions remained in force as emergency teams worked across both fire zones.
