More than 30 vehicles were torched deliberately across Worcester and Hereford in a year, fire service figures show.

Over the course of a decade, fire crews in the area were called out to over 750 deliberate vehicle fires, 37 of them last year.

NFCC chair, Mark Hardingham said: “Deliberate fires - of any sort - put the public at risk and the reality is they divert crews away from other incidents, where life could be at risk".

Arsonists torching vehicles are putting lives at risk and taking up time and resources from already stretched services, according to the Fire Brigades Union and the National Fire Chiefs Council. Since recording began in 1981, England’s fire and rescue services have attended more than a million deliberate vehicle fires, with nearly 8,500 incidents in 2020.

The chair of the NFCC described the thousands of "mindless incidents" as shocking and called on people to report vandals setting cars alight to the police.

Firefighters at the Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue Service responded to 26 fewer incidents involving this kind of arson last year compared to 2019.

He said: "Car fires are usually classed as ‘secondary fires’ but these can soon escalate into more serious fires, requiring additional resources.The nature of car fires also put crews at risk as they can pose difficulties and become complex, dependent of the type of fuel while taking into account the increase of electric vehicles. The location can also have an impact as deliberate fires can often be in harder to reach, more remote locations".

There were 76 deliberate vehicle fires attended in 2015 and there has been a fall of 70% since 2011 when 125 incidents were recorded.

Data released by the Home Office shows that vehicle fires accounted for around 8% of all deliberate blazes attended by fire crews in the area last year, though figures could be higher as not all fires are reported.

A spokeswoman from the Fire Brigades Union said: “The fire service is a vital public service and, no matter what the incident or the cause, firefighters will always be there to respond.However, deliberately caused fires use up valuable time and resources of an already over-stretched and under-funded service."

Home Office Fire Minister Stephen Greenhalgh said:"Deliberate fire setting is a terrible crime that puts our brave firefighters and the public in unnecessary danger."

Group Commander George Marshall of the Hereford and Worcester Fire and Rescue Service said: "While we are pleased to see the number of these incidents dropping, as a fire service we deplore any such deliberate actions which cause danger to the public and put members of the emergency services, which might have to deal with these incidents, at risk. Reducing deliberate fires is a priority for HWFRS and we have been proactive in our arson reduction work, including educating school children, improving local reporting and working with other agencies to reduce the number of deliberate fires in Herefordshire and Worcestershire."

For more details visit the Hereford & Worcester Fire and Rescue Service website www.hwfire.org.uk