Dernière minute
DEUSA bombardieren im Iran erneut Ziele – Trump droht mit heftigeren AngriffenINUS Launches Fresh Strikes on Iran, Escalating Regional ConflictDEUSA beenden Angriffswelle gegen Iran – Raketenalarme in Bahrain und KuwaitARمضيق هرمز: حرب أمريكية إيرانية مفتوحة حول ممر الطاقة العالميTRErdoğan'dan NATO Zirvesi'nde Önemli Açıklamalar: Savunma Harcamaları, Çelik Kubbe ve Ortadoğu BarışıDEGoogle ändert Regeln für Cloud-Speicher: Mehr Daten zählen bald ins KontingentTRGastronomi Diplomasisi: NATO Zirvesi'nde Türk Mutfağı Sahne AldıDEMerz will sich als Reformkanzler präsentierenTRİstanbul Özel İtalyan Lisesi'nde Grev Sonrası İşten Çıkarmalar: İki Öğretmen ve Bir Müdür Başyardımcısı Görevden AlındıCN強颱巴威路徑北調 中部以北仍在暴風圈籠罩範圍DEUSA bombardieren im Iran erneut Ziele – Trump droht mit heftigeren AngriffenINUS Launches Fresh Strikes on Iran, Escalating Regional ConflictDEUSA beenden Angriffswelle gegen Iran – Raketenalarme in Bahrain und KuwaitARمضيق هرمز: حرب أمريكية إيرانية مفتوحة حول ممر الطاقة العالميTRErdoğan'dan NATO Zirvesi'nde Önemli Açıklamalar: Savunma Harcamaları, Çelik Kubbe ve Ortadoğu BarışıDEGoogle ändert Regeln für Cloud-Speicher: Mehr Daten zählen bald ins KontingentTRGastronomi Diplomasisi: NATO Zirvesi'nde Türk Mutfağı Sahne AldıDEMerz will sich als Reformkanzler präsentierenTRİstanbul Özel İtalyan Lisesi'nde Grev Sonrası İşten Çıkarmalar: İki Öğretmen ve Bir Müdür Başyardımcısı Görevden AlındıCN強颱巴威路徑北調 中部以北仍在暴風圈籠罩範圍
Newsgather
BackEurope Experiences Record Heat and Wildfires in 2025, Becoming Fastest-Warming Continent
Europe Experiences Record Heat and Wildfires in 2025, Becoming Fastest-Warming Continent
En développement
Sky News Tech28.04.2026Environment2 dk okumaUnited Kingdom

Europe Experiences Record Heat and Wildfires in 2025, Becoming Fastest-Warming Continent

Copernicus and WMO report details extreme climate events including 46°C in Portugal, 30°C in Arctic Circle, and unprecedented wildfire season

L'essentiel

  • Europe was the fastest-warming continent in 2025, with record temperatures including 46°C in Portugal and 30°C within the Arctic Circle.
  • The European State of the Climate report documented exceptional heatwaves, record wildfire damage, and the UK's hottest summer on record, with scientists warning that extreme years are becoming the norm.

Résumé généré par IA

Pourquoi c'est important

The European State of the Climate 2025 report documents the continent's fastest-warming status, with four key factors: Arctic proximity (warming 3x faster than global average), increased sunshine hours, stronger heatwaves from changing weather patterns, and melting snow cover that previously reflected solar radiation.

Taille de police

Almost the entirety of Europe saw above-average temperatures last year, while wildfires burnt a record area and heatwaves struck from north to south, according to an extensive new climate study. 2025 brought 46C (115F) heat to Portugal, temperatures of 30C (86F) within the Arctic Circle, and 20 large wildfires at the same time in Spain. "Dangerously high" temperatures inflicted "consequences for societies and ecosystems across Europe", the European State of the Climate report said. The paper, produced by the Copernicus Climate Change Service and the World Meteorological Organization, found: 'Exceptional' British summers 'becoming the norm' In Britain the year saw the hottest summer on record, "nationally significant" water shortfalls, record wildfire numbers and £800m in losses to farmers. While the country has previously seen very hot summers, including famously in 1976, environmentalists are alarmed by how much more frequent and widespread they are. Samantha Burgess of Copernicus told Sky News the heat in 1976 was "very localised" over Britain. But last June brought "heatwave conditions effectively right from the UK all the way to Eastern Europe, to Greece". Hilary McGrady, the head of Europe's biggest conservation charity, the National Trust, told Sky News: "These exceptional years are now becoming the norm." It recently asked its five million members to write to their MPs about protecting Britain's declining wildlife and countryside. "We need urgent action to adapt and to reduce emissions at the pace that science demands," she told Sky News. Why is Europe the fastest-warming continent? Last year's extreme weather was often intensified by climate change, as the continent warms faster than any other. Copernicus gave four reasons for this trend, including Europe's proximity to the Arctic region, which itself is warming at least three times faster than the global average. The continent is also becoming sunnier, and changing weather patterns are producing stronger heatwaves. Areas covered in snow, which reflects the sun's heat, are also melting. Read more from Sky News: Fresh oil shock triggered New red card offence for World Cup New record for solar as continent becomes sunnier But there was a ray of light in the report in that solar power reached record levels. It provided 12.5% of Europe's electricity, up from 10.3%, driven by increased installations and the fact the continent is becoming sunnier. Since the 1980s, stricter regulations have reduced aerosol pollution from cars and power plants; this has cleared the skies of reflective clouds, allowing more sunlight to reach the continent. However, solar panels do not function well if they become too hot, according to the trade body Solar Energy UK.

À surveiller

Perspective IA — des possibilités, pas des certitudes

  • European governments will announce enhanced climate adaptation funding

    Probable · En quelques mois

  • Solar capacity will continue expanding despite efficiency challenges from heat

    Très probable · En quelques mois

  • 2026 will likely exceed 2025 temperature records

    Possible · En quelques mois

Questions ouvertes

  • What specific emissions reduction targets are needed to slow warming?
  • How quickly will Arctic ice loss accelerate?
  • What adaptation measures will European governments implement?

Sujets liés

This article was originally published by Sky News Tech.

Articles liés

Plus sur ce sujetclimate change