
Temperature records broken as extreme heat grips parts of Europe
In south-west France, records were broken on Monday in Angoulême, Bergerac, Bordeaux, Saint-Émilion and Saint-Girons. Météo France said the 'often remarkable, even unprecedented, maximum temperatures' in the region were 12C above the norm for the last few decades.
In Croatia, air temperature records were set in Šibenik, at 39.5C, and Dubrovnik, at 38.9C, while large forest fires raged along its coasts and ripped through neighbouring countries in the Balkans.
Beyond Europe, dozens of temperature records were broken across Canada, and record-breaking heat above 50C in Iraq was blamed for a nationwide blackout.
The heatwave in southern Europe comes as Nordic countries recover from unprecedentedtemperatures above 30C in the Arctic Circle this month.
Bob Ward, a policy director at the Grantham Research Institute, said: 'This summer, like every summer now, has been exceptional in terms of extreme heat around the world.'
In Italy, where 16 of 27 major cities were placed under red heat alerts and a four-year-old boy died of heatstroke, and in Spain, where a man died in a wildfire after suffering burns on 98% of his body, the high heat did not break a large number of records but still rang alarm bells.
'The main characteristic [of the heatwave] is the length and extent rather than the intensity,' said José Camacho, a climate scientist and spokesperson for Aemet, the Spanish weather agency. 'But the temperatures are still very high.'
In the south-west of France, 40% of a sample of weather stations recorded temperatures above 40C on Monday. Lauriane Batté, a climate scientist at Météo France, said it was too soon to say if records were being 'shattered' rather than simply broken, but said the geographic extent of the heat was significant.
'Unfortunately, it's to be expected,' she said, adding that more than half of the 51 heatwaves in France since 1947 had occurred in the last 15 years. 'Clearly, it's a sign that the climate is warming.'
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The hot weather across Europe has dried out vegetation and allowed wildfires to spread further, in what scientists have described as a 'molotov cocktail' of climatic conditions. EU fire scientists projected 'extreme to very extreme conditions' across the entire continent this week, with 'particularly severe' risks in much of southern Europe and high anomalies expected in parts of the Nordics.
Wildfires in Europe have burned more than 400,000 hectares so far this year, according to data published on Tuesday, which is 87% more than the average for this time of year over the last two decades.
High heat kills tens of thousands of people in Europe each year. Researchers estimate that dangerous temperatures in Europe will kill 8,000 to 80,000 more people a year by the end of the century as the lives lost to stronger heat outpace those saved from milder cold weather.
Antonio Gasparrini, an epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, said implementing effective and diverse public health measures was critical as heatwaves became more frequent.
'This is another extreme heatwave hitting Europe this summer,' he said. 'As in previous events in the past months, we can expect not just a substantial death toll but also strong geographical differentials in excess mortality.'
Last week, the World Meteorological Organization said wildfires and poor air quality were compounding the negative health effects of extreme heat. It noted that temperatures during the first week of August reached more than 42C in parts of west Asia, southern central Asia, most of north Africa, southern Pakistan, and the south-west US, with local areas exceeding 45C.
'This is what climate change looks like,' Ward said. 'And it will only get worse.'

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Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Spain battles 20 major wildfires amid scorching heat, deploys more troops
VILLARDEVÓS, Aug 17 (Reuters) - Scorching heat hampered efforts to contain 20 major wildfires across Spain on Sunday, prompting the government to deploy an additional 500 troops from the military emergency unit to support firefighting operations. In the northwestern region of Galicia, several fires have converged to form a large blaze, forcing the closure of highways and rail services to the region. Southern Europe is experiencing one of its worst wildfire seasons in two decades, with Spain among the hardest-hit countries. In the past week alone, fires there have claimed three lives and burned more than 115,000 hectares, while neighbouring Portugal also battles widespread blazes. Temperatures are expected to reach up to 45 degrees Celsius (113 Fahrenheit) in some areas on Sunday, Spanish national weather agency AEMET said. "There are still some challenging days ahead and, unfortunately, the weather is not on our side," Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez told a news conference in Ourense, one of the most affected areas. He announced an increase in military reinforcements, bringing the total number of troops deployed across Spain to 1,900. Virginia Barcones, director general of emergency services, told Spanish public TV temperatures were expected to drop from Tuesday, but for now the weather conditions were "very adverse". "Today there are extremely high temperatures with an extreme risk of fires, which complicates the firefighting efforts," Barcones said. In the village of Villardevos in Galicia, desperate neighbours have organised to fight the flames on their own with water buckets as the area was left without electricity to power water pumps. "The fireplanes come in from all sides, but they don't come here," Basilio Rodriguez, a resident, told Reuters on Saturday. Added Lorea Pascual, another local resident: "It's insurmountable, it couldn't be worse". Interior ministry data show 27 people have been arrested and 92 were under investigation for suspected arson since June. In neighbouring Portugal, wildfires have burnt some 155,000 hectares of vegetation so far this year, according to provisional data from the ICNF forestry protection institute - three times the average for this period between 2006 to 2024. About half of that area burned just in the past three days. Thousands of firefighters were battling eight large blazes in central and northern Portugal, the largest of them near Piodao, a scenic, mountainous area popular with tourists. Another blaze in Trancoso, further north, has now been raging for eight days. A smaller fire a few miles east claimed a local resident's life on Friday - the first this season.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
Spain deploys 500 more troops to battle wildfires during extended heatwave
Spain is deploying a further 500 soldiers to battle wildfires that have torn through parched woodland during a prolonged spell of scorching weather, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez said Sunday. The decision to add to the more than 1,400 troops already on wildfire duty came as authorities struggled to contain forest blazes, especially in the northwestern Galicia region, and awaited the arrival of promised aircraft reinforcements from other European countries. Firefighters are tackling 12 major wildfires in Galicia, all of them near the city of Ourense, the head of the Galician regional government Alfonso Rueda told a press conference with Sánchez. ' Homes are still under threat so we have lockdowns in place and are carrying out evacuations,' Rueda said. Galicia has been battling the spreading flames for more than a week. Temperatures in Spain could reach 45 degrees Celsius (113 degrees Fahrenheit) in some areas on Sunday, the Spanish national weather agency AEMET said. On Saturday, the maximum temperature was 44.7 degrees Celsius (112.46 degrees Fahrenheit) in the southern city of Cordoba, it said. 'This Sunday, when extraordinarily high temperatures are expected, the danger of wildfires is extreme in most of the country,' AEMET said on the social platform X. The fires in Spain this year have burned 158,000 hectares (390,000 acres), according to the European Union's European Forest Fire Information System. That is an area roughly as big as metropolitan London. Europe has been warming twice as fast as the global average since the 1980s, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service. Scientists say that climate change is exacerbating the frequency and intensity of heat and dryness in parts of Europe, making the region more vulnerable to wildfires. Spain was expecting the arrival of two Dutch water-dumping planes that were to join aircraft from France and Italy already helping Spanish authorities under a European cooperation agreement. Firefighters from other countries are also expected to arrive in the region in coming days, Spain's Civil Protection Agency chief Virginia Barcones told public broadcaster RTVE. National rail operator Renfe said it suspended Madrid-Galicia high-speed train services scheduled for Sunday due to the fires. Galician authorities advised people to wear face masks and limit their time spent outdoors to avoid inhaling smoke and ash. Portugal is set for cooler weather in coming days after a spate of severe woodland fires. A national state of alert due to wildfires was enacted Aug. 2 and was due to end Sunday, a day before two Swedish firefighting planes were to arrive. As in Spain, Portugal's resources have been stretched. On Sunday, more than 4,000 firefighters and more than 1,300 vehicles were deployed, as well as 17 aircraft, the country's Civil Protection Agency said. The scorched area of forest in Portugal so far this year is 17 times higher than in 2024, at around 139,000 hectares, according to preliminary calculations by the Institute for the Conservation of Nature and Forests, a government body. Greece, Bulgaria, Montenegro and Albania have also requested help from the EU's firefighting force in recent days to deal with forest fires. The force has already been activated as many times this year as in all of last year's summer fire season.


The Guardian
4 hours ago
- The Guardian
‘Pray for rain': wildfires in Canada are now burning where they never used to
Road closures, evacuations, travel chaos and stern warnings from officials have all become fixtures of Canada's wildfire season. But as the country goes through its second-worst burn on record, the blazes come with a twist: few are coming from the western provinces, the traditional centre of destruction. Instead, the worst of the fires have been concentrated in the prairie provinces and the Atlantic region, with bone-dry conditions upending how Canada responds to a threat which is only likely to grow as the climate warms. Experts say the shift serves as a stark reminder that the risk of disaster is present across the thickly forested nation. In recent weeks, tens of thousands of people in communities across the country have been evacuated due to the wildfires. Saskatchewan and Manitoba have been the worst hit, home to more than 60% of the volume burned in Canada. But the fires have also seized strained resources in Atlantic Canada, where officials in Newfoundland and Labrador are struggling to battle out of control blazes. In response to the crisis, Newfoundland premier John Hogan said on Wednesday morning he would temporarily ban off-road vehicles in forested areas because the province 'simply cannot afford any further risks, given the number of out-of-control wildfires we have'. The ban follows a similar move by Nova Scotia, where a 15 hectare (37 acre) out-of-control fire is burning outside the provincial capital of Halifax. In addition to barring vehicles in wooded areas, Nova Scotia officials also shut down hiking, camping and fishing in forests: a decision reflecting the troubling fact that nearly all fires in the province are started by humans. 'Conditions are really dry, there's no rain in sight, the risk is extremely high in Nova Scotia,' the province's premier Tim Houston told reporters. 'I'm happy to make sure that we're doing everything we can to protect people, to protect property and try to just get through this fire season and really just pray for rain.' Fires have even erupted in Ontario's Kawartha Lakes region, a collection of rural communities less than 100 miles (161km) north of Toronto that are a popular summer destination for residents of Canada's largest city. For a country of sprawling landmass, fires have long been a common feature of the hot spring, summer and fall. But for the last century, a mix of geography, climate and industry meant that the biggest and hottest fires – and the vast majority of destruction – have been concentrated in Canada's western provinces. That changed in 2023 when Canada experienced its worst-ever fire season and the thick haze of smoke blanketed the US. 'We had fire everywhere. We had evacuations everywhere. We had smoke at a scale that was remarkable. And so for the first time, we had a different thought about wildfires as a country. With all of the smoke, it became a global conversation. This year is repeating all of that,' said Paul Kovacs, the executive director of the Institute for Catastrophic Loss Reduction at Western University. 'This is a national issue. This can show up anywhere.' Kovacs, whose organization focuses largely on preventing structural loss, said more buildings have been destroyed this year compared with 2023, and warned that a majority of the residents of the most fire-prone parts of the country, like British Columbia and Alberta, have not yet taken steps to protect or 'harden' their homes from fire risk. He hopes that a broader national recognition of fire risk, however, spurs people in other parts of the country to reassess how vulnerable their home or business might be to a fast-moving blaze. 'That's the behavioural change we're hoping to see next because there will be many years of fires to come. The size of the burned area will not go back to where things were 25 years ago. This is just our new reality and we need to be prepared. We change in mindset and a recognition that this can, and probably will, happen in so many parts of our country.' Already, nearly 7.5m hectares (18.5m acres) have burned across Canada in 2025, far above the 10-year average. Despite the national threat, there is no 'one-size-fits-all' approach to reducing risk, said Jen Baron, a postdoctoral researcher at the University of British Columbia's Centre for Wildfire Coexistence. 'British Columbia and Alberta have long been the poster children for this wildfire problem for a long time, but other regions are beginning to experience some of those same challenges. This speaks to the pervasiveness of climate change: even if a location was relatively low fire risk in the past, with the extended droughts that we're seeing, that's no longer the case now and into the future,' she said. 'Even though some parts of the country are having a wet year on average, things across the board are still warmer and drier than they were in the past,' she said. That uncertainty has prompted a multimillion dollar funding effort from the federal government to study risk and adaptation because 'there are very few parts of Canada that would be totally protected from wildfire', said Baron. With an international focus on wildfires, experts like Baron hope the recent years of immense blazes and choking smoke can spur a response that acknowledges the legacy of the forestry industry practices, urban encroachment into the wilderness and the Indigenous stewardship of forests. 'We're just starting to catch up to the scale of the problem. Wildfire is a natural ecological process, but it's become increasingly challenging to manage with changing climatic conditions.' Baron said the 'mild' nature of this year's western fire season also provides a glimpse into the country's future. 'Instead of one big fire year every 15 or 20 years, every year will be big in some part of the country,' she said 'We really don't know exactly how climate change is going to continue. It doesn't drive things in linear ways. And we can't predict where there's going to be a drought next year. But it will be somewhere.'