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Western Europe records its hottest June as heatwaves surge: EU monitor – World


Western Europe records its hottest June as heatwaves surge: EU monitor – World

Western Europe experienced its hottest June on record last month as a searing heatwave swept across a continent facing increasingly frequent and intense heat extremes, the European Union’s (EU) climate monitor said Thursday.

The report comes as a new heatwave is battering Europe this week, following a record-breaking one in June and an unusually early spring hot spell in May.

The average temperature in western Europe reached 20.74 degrees Celsius in June, more than 3℃ above the 1991-2020 norm, according to the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service.

It broke the region’s previous record set in June 2025.

“We will see more heatwaves in a warmer world,” said Samantha Burgess, strategic climate lead at the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF), which operates Copernicus.

“They will be more intense and they will last longer, and they will impact more geographical areas,” Burgess told AFP.

It was the second hottest June on record for the world and for Europe as a whole, Copernicus said, as human-induced climate change continues to push temperatures higher.

Global temperatures in June were 1.39℃ above the estimated pre-industrial average, a period covering 1850-1900, according to Copernicus.

The world’s oceans experienced their highest June temperatures on record, against a backdrop of the warming El Nino weather pattern which is developing and is forecast to strengthen in the tropical Pacific.

“We’re at a transition point where climate change is shifting from being an abstract statistical future problem that you read about in reports, to a concrete present and disruptive feature of daily life,” Burgess said.

France, Spain and Belgium.

More than two-thirds of Europeans — 410 million people — endured temperatures topping 35℃ during the June 15-30 heatwave, according to an AFP analysis.

The June heatwave “contributed to severe health impacts, including heat-related deaths”, Copernicus said.

Nearly 300 million people, including 100 million children and elderly people, may have been exposed to harmful levels of ozone pollution during the punishing June heat, according to a report from NGO Global Witness exclusively shared with AFP.

High rates of humidity were one of the reasons why the June heatwave was so intense, Burgess said.

“It was extremely humid, which then meant we people didn’t get relief at night. So we had a number of tropical nights in a row,” she said.

The Mediterranean experienced its own record-breaking marine heatwave, with the continent’s Atlantic coasts also hit by hot spells, putting ecosystems at risk.

“When the sea is warm, we get less alleviation at nighttime because there’s no coolness coming from the ocean. There’s no sea breeze,” Burgess said.

Dry conditions raised drought risks in eastern Europe and contributed to wildfire activity in the Iberian Peninsula and southern France, Copernicus said.

fossil fuel we pump into the atmosphere,” she said.

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