Firefighting teams from Poland, Romania and Slovakia are due to arrive in Greece on Thursday to help local and other foreign emergency services combat fires near the capital, Athens, as EU climate authorities say the world seems on track for its hottest July since measurements began.
The firefighters are being deployed in Greece as part of a European Union civil protection mechanism that foresees sending international crews to parts of southern Europe over the summer.
Israel has also said it will send two firefighting planes, adding to the four from Italy and France.
The fires in Greece are being driven partly by hot summer weather, with temperatures in the country's south expected to reach 44 degrees Celsius (111 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of the week.
What is the fire situation in Greece?
Although a fire brigade official told Reuters news agency that a fire west of Athens that prompted mass evacuations earlier in the week had been brought under control, there were continued evacuations on Thursday along a highway between Athens and the southern city of Corinth.
On the island of Rhodes, a blaze in a forested mountain area continues to rage, with many residents forced to flee the flames.
Emergency authorities said patrols of forest areas in Greece will continue by land and air in a bid to prevent further conflagrations as the hot weather creates tinderbox conditions.
Massive southern heat wave
Over the past week, many regions in southern Europe have been affected by extreme heat, with forecasters predicting more scorching weather to come.
Temperatures in the Italian capital, Rome, eased slightly on Thursday after reaching 42-43 C on Tuesday. The islands of Sicily and Sardinia reached 46 C.
Parts of Spain saw temperatures as high as 45 C on Wednesday. In the Canary Islands, some 400 firefighters have been fighting a fire across 3,500 hectares (8,649 acres) of forest. People there have been warned to wear face masks outside due to poor air quality.
In the south of France, temperatures of around 40 C were recorded on Tuesday, including on the island of Corsica.
The high temperatures in Europe come as several other world regions, including in the southern US, Iraq and China, experience extreme heat amid the northern hemisphere summer.
Climate warnings
The EU's climate observatory says the world is likely heading for its warmest July since records have been kept.
"The first 15 days of July have been the warmest 15 days on record," Carlo Buontempo, director of the Copernicus Climate Change Service(C3S), told the AFP news agency.
The World Meteorological Organization recently said preliminary global figures showed last month was the hottest June on record.
Climate scientists are in overwhelming agreement that the current heat waves are being exacerbated and made more frequent by human-made global warming driven largely by the burning of fossil fuels.