Europe has experienced another day of extreme heat with temperature records being broken across the continent again on Saturday, according to the BBC.
Germany Sets New All-Time High for Second Consecutive Day
Germany set a new all-time high for the second day in a row, as temperatures reached 41.5C, according to provisional data; Germany’s preliminary record of 41.5C was set in Möckern-Drewitz in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany’s Meteorological Service said.
That surpassed a record of 41.3C set just a day earlier in Saarbrucken near the French border. “This heat isn’t pleasant summer weather. It’s a health crisis. ” Katrin Goering-Eckardt, a German politician and former leader of the Green Party, said on X.
Heatwave Moves Further North and East, Breaking Records in Denmark and Czech Republic
On Saturday, records also fell in Denmark and the Czech Republic as the unmatched early summer heatwave moved further north and east, affecting more people. The Czech Republic recorded its highest-ever temperature on Saturday, with a reading of 40.8C at a weather station in Doksany north of Prague, the national meteorological service (CHMI) said.
And forecasters in Denmark said a provisional temperature of 37C was recorded in Odum, near Aarhus. This exceeded the previous all-time record of 36.4C set in 1976. In Berlin, police deployed two water cannons to spray mist onto people.
Scientists Attribute the Heatwave to Climate Change
The heatwave, which began in the Iberian peninsula, has been linked to the deaths of hundreds of people over the past week. An estimated 150 million people in Europe are now experiencing temperatures of over 35C. The World Meteorological Organization has warned the heatwave would have “major impacts” to health and ecosystems.
Scientists from the World Weather Attribution say a heatwave of this magnitude so early in the summer would have been virtually impossible 50 years ago. They say climate change is “unequivocally” to blame.
Since the heatwave began, the number of drowning deaths in France has risen to at least 55. An estimated two-thirds of them had been swimming in unsupervised areas. Spain’s MoMo monitoring system has recorded 327 deaths that could be linked to the heat between Sunday and Thursday.
Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent – because of a range of factors including the rapid heating of the Arctic, and changes in the pattern of the jet stream. The extreme heat will continue over the weekend into Monday with temperatures above 40C still possible in places, says BBC weather forecaster Ben Rich. However cooler conditions developing in the west of the continent will sweep eastwards to bring some relief later in the week.
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