Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Europe bakes again in near-record temperatures

-

Europe baked in near-record temperatures on Monday but some respite was on the horizon after weeks of nonstop sunshine as people come to terms with what may prove to be the region's new normal in an era of climate change.

Here is a roundup of recent developments:

- France nearing a peak -

A crowded outdoor swimming pool on a canal in central Paris as people seek relief from near-record t...
A crowded outdoor swimming pool on a canal in central Paris as people seek relief from near-record temperatures in a heatwave sweeping across Europe.
Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT, AFP

Temperatures were expected to peak at around 37 degrees Celcius (99 degrees Fahrenheit) in southern France on Monday, while the north is due to be hotter on Tuesday. On Saturday, they hit their highest levels since a 2003 heatwave killed thousands of mainly elderly people.

Health Minister Agnes Buzyn said people had to take proper care to cope with the heat and warned that everyone had to adapt.

A dried cornfield is in Mitschdorf  eastern France
A dried cornfield is in Mitschdorf, eastern France
PATRICK HERTZOG, AFP

"You need to drink a lot, but also to eat and take salt," Buzyn said.

"We are probably going to adapt our warnings in the coming years, because this is something we haven't been seeing until now."

- Spain fires under control-

In Spain the death toll rose to seven after a 40-year-old German man on the Camino de Santiago (Way of Saint James) pilgrimage succumbed to heat stroke on Sunday in the eastern region of Extremadura, a spokeswoman for Spain's Guardia Civil police force told AFP.

Beach-goers cool off at the Spanish seaside resort of Benidorm
Beach-goers cool off at the Spanish seaside resort of Benidorm
JOSE JORDAN, AFP

Local officials also recorded other heat stroke deaths in the Extremadura and Catalonia regions.

Firefighters, benefitting from calmer winds, were meanwhile gaining control of a wildfire in the southwestern province of Huelva, just across the border from the Algarve in southern Portugal.

Temperatures remained high, especially in the southeast where they were forecast to hit 40-42 C.

- Portugal fires -

In Portugal, temperatures have eased slightly but not by enough to make the job of some 1,100 firefighters in Monchique any easier.

Smoke rises from a wildfire close to Monchique in the Algarve  southern Portugal  where more than a ...
Smoke rises from a wildfire close to Monchique in the Algarve, southern Portugal, where more than a 1,000 firefighters are battling the blaze
CARLOS COSTA, AFP

Monchique, in southern Portugal, was shrouded in thick clouds of smoke early Monday after the authorities evacuated several houses overnight, with 24 people injured, one seriously.

The weather service said that after Saturday's peak, temperatures were back below 45 C and should continue lower over the next few days.

- Fresh spike in Germany -

Germany expects a fresh spike mid-week to around 39 C before temperatures ease, with official figures showing the average for April-July running 3.6 degrees higher than the 1961-1990 reference period.

Young western lowland gorilla Richard eats frozen fruits to cool off in Prague
Young western lowland gorilla Richard eats frozen fruits to cool off in Prague
Michal CIZEK, AFP

Farmers continued to plead for help, with the president of Germany's farmers' association, Joachim Rukwied, saying a billion euros ($1.15 billion) in government aid may be necessary as crop failure rates hit 70 percent in some areas.

More than a million children returned to school on Monday in three German states -– Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland and Hesse -- but some were allowed to go home early because of the heatwave.

- British islands in trouble -

People cooled off on pedalos in London's Hyde Park
People cooled off on pedalos in London's Hyde Park
Ben STANSALL, AFP

Britain saw continued hot weather in the south with a maximum of 32 C but it was cooler and cloudier in the north.

Reports said the persistent lack of rain has hit the country's more remote islands, such as Lundy in the Bristol Channel -- with a population in the dozens -- which is now reliant on bottled water from the mainland after local supplies ran dry.

Arran in Scotland, the Isle of Scilly in southwest England and Jersey in the Channel Islands have all asked people to cut water consumption, the Daily Express report added.

- Netherlands -

The banks of the Rhine river near Lobith in the Netherlands have been dried out by the ongoing droug...
The banks of the Rhine river near Lobith in the Netherlands have been dried out by the ongoing drought
Jasper Juinen, ANP/AFP/File

The heatwave has hit the low-lying Netherlands hard like many other countries but no one thought it could be a threat to its world-famous system of dams and canals designed to keep the sea at bay.

River levels have fallen so low that seawater is seeping in to waterways, and the Rijkswaterstaat, which manages the national water system, has been opening barrages inland to flush it out.

- Greek fire toll rises to 91 -

The wildfires in Greece killed at least 93 people
The wildfires in Greece killed at least 93 people
Savvas KARMANIOLAS, AFP/File

Greece was a little cooler but the toll in last month's wildfire northeast of Athens rose to 91 as a 95-year-old woman died of her injuries, officials said.

Another 36 people remain hospitalised after the July 23 disaster, six of them in critical condition.

- Scorching Scandinavia -

A graphic showing the heatwave in Europe
A graphic showing the heatwave in Europe
, AFP

Wildfires that have been raging across Sweden are abating, emergency services SOS Alarm said, adding that the blazes were down to eight on Monday.

The nation's far north saw heavy rainfall on Monday, authorities said, after record heat in the Arctic Circle triggered drought and wildfires. Drought is persisting in many other areas of the country.

In neighbouring Finland, a Helsinki supermarket opened its doors overnight Saturday to customers seeking refuge from the heat.

A parched sunflower with dried leaves in western Switzerland
A parched sunflower with dried leaves in western Switzerland
Fabrice COFFRINI, AFP

In a video released on Facebook, the K-Supermarket showed customers chilling on mattresses and in sleeping bags.

Europe baked in near-record temperatures on Monday but some respite was on the horizon after weeks of nonstop sunshine as people come to terms with what may prove to be the region’s new normal in an era of climate change.

Here is a roundup of recent developments:

– France nearing a peak –

A crowded outdoor swimming pool on a canal in central Paris as people seek relief from near-record t...

A crowded outdoor swimming pool on a canal in central Paris as people seek relief from near-record temperatures in a heatwave sweeping across Europe.
Geoffroy VAN DER HASSELT, AFP

Temperatures were expected to peak at around 37 degrees Celcius (99 degrees Fahrenheit) in southern France on Monday, while the north is due to be hotter on Tuesday. On Saturday, they hit their highest levels since a 2003 heatwave killed thousands of mainly elderly people.

Health Minister Agnes Buzyn said people had to take proper care to cope with the heat and warned that everyone had to adapt.

A dried cornfield is in Mitschdorf  eastern France

A dried cornfield is in Mitschdorf, eastern France
PATRICK HERTZOG, AFP

“You need to drink a lot, but also to eat and take salt,” Buzyn said.

“We are probably going to adapt our warnings in the coming years, because this is something we haven’t been seeing until now.”

– Spain fires under control-

In Spain the death toll rose to seven after a 40-year-old German man on the Camino de Santiago (Way of Saint James) pilgrimage succumbed to heat stroke on Sunday in the eastern region of Extremadura, a spokeswoman for Spain’s Guardia Civil police force told AFP.

Beach-goers cool off at the Spanish seaside resort of Benidorm

Beach-goers cool off at the Spanish seaside resort of Benidorm
JOSE JORDAN, AFP

Local officials also recorded other heat stroke deaths in the Extremadura and Catalonia regions.

Firefighters, benefitting from calmer winds, were meanwhile gaining control of a wildfire in the southwestern province of Huelva, just across the border from the Algarve in southern Portugal.

Temperatures remained high, especially in the southeast where they were forecast to hit 40-42 C.

– Portugal fires –

In Portugal, temperatures have eased slightly but not by enough to make the job of some 1,100 firefighters in Monchique any easier.

Smoke rises from a wildfire close to Monchique in the Algarve  southern Portugal  where more than a ...

Smoke rises from a wildfire close to Monchique in the Algarve, southern Portugal, where more than a 1,000 firefighters are battling the blaze
CARLOS COSTA, AFP

Monchique, in southern Portugal, was shrouded in thick clouds of smoke early Monday after the authorities evacuated several houses overnight, with 24 people injured, one seriously.

The weather service said that after Saturday’s peak, temperatures were back below 45 C and should continue lower over the next few days.

– Fresh spike in Germany –

Germany expects a fresh spike mid-week to around 39 C before temperatures ease, with official figures showing the average for April-July running 3.6 degrees higher than the 1961-1990 reference period.

Young western lowland gorilla Richard eats frozen fruits to cool off in Prague

Young western lowland gorilla Richard eats frozen fruits to cool off in Prague
Michal CIZEK, AFP

Farmers continued to plead for help, with the president of Germany’s farmers’ association, Joachim Rukwied, saying a billion euros ($1.15 billion) in government aid may be necessary as crop failure rates hit 70 percent in some areas.

More than a million children returned to school on Monday in three German states -– Rhineland-Palatinate, Saarland and Hesse — but some were allowed to go home early because of the heatwave.

– British islands in trouble –

People cooled off on pedalos in London's Hyde Park

People cooled off on pedalos in London's Hyde Park
Ben STANSALL, AFP

Britain saw continued hot weather in the south with a maximum of 32 C but it was cooler and cloudier in the north.

Reports said the persistent lack of rain has hit the country’s more remote islands, such as Lundy in the Bristol Channel — with a population in the dozens — which is now reliant on bottled water from the mainland after local supplies ran dry.

Arran in Scotland, the Isle of Scilly in southwest England and Jersey in the Channel Islands have all asked people to cut water consumption, the Daily Express report added.

– Netherlands –

The banks of the Rhine river near Lobith in the Netherlands have been dried out by the ongoing droug...

The banks of the Rhine river near Lobith in the Netherlands have been dried out by the ongoing drought
Jasper Juinen, ANP/AFP/File

The heatwave has hit the low-lying Netherlands hard like many other countries but no one thought it could be a threat to its world-famous system of dams and canals designed to keep the sea at bay.

River levels have fallen so low that seawater is seeping in to waterways, and the Rijkswaterstaat, which manages the national water system, has been opening barrages inland to flush it out.

– Greek fire toll rises to 91 –

The wildfires in Greece killed at least 93 people

The wildfires in Greece killed at least 93 people
Savvas KARMANIOLAS, AFP/File

Greece was a little cooler but the toll in last month’s wildfire northeast of Athens rose to 91 as a 95-year-old woman died of her injuries, officials said.

Another 36 people remain hospitalised after the July 23 disaster, six of them in critical condition.

– Scorching Scandinavia –

A graphic showing the heatwave in Europe

A graphic showing the heatwave in Europe
, AFP

Wildfires that have been raging across Sweden are abating, emergency services SOS Alarm said, adding that the blazes were down to eight on Monday.

The nation’s far north saw heavy rainfall on Monday, authorities said, after record heat in the Arctic Circle triggered drought and wildfires. Drought is persisting in many other areas of the country.

In neighbouring Finland, a Helsinki supermarket opened its doors overnight Saturday to customers seeking refuge from the heat.

A parched sunflower with dried leaves in western Switzerland

A parched sunflower with dried leaves in western Switzerland
Fabrice COFFRINI, AFP

In a video released on Facebook, the K-Supermarket showed customers chilling on mattresses and in sleeping bags.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

Tech & Science

The groundbreaking initiative aims to provide job training and confidence to people with autism.

Tech & Science

Microsoft and Google drubbed quarterly earnings expectations.

Entertainment

Steve Carell stars in the title role of "Uncle Vanya" in a new Broadway play ay Lincoln Center.

Business

Catherine Berthet (L) and Naoise Ryan (R) join relatives of people killed in the Ethiopian Airlines Flight 302 Boeing 737 MAX crash at a...