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BackEurope Braces for Sweltering Heatwave, Temperatures Nearing 40°C
Europe Braces for Sweltering Heatwave, Temperatures Nearing 40°C
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The Independent World6/27/2026World2 min read

Europe Braces for Sweltering Heatwave, Temperatures Nearing 40°C

Quick Look

  • A severe heatwave is moving east across Europe, with Germany and other regions expecting temperatures near 40°C.
  • The heat has already caused dozens of deaths in France, disrupted travel and infrastructure, and scientists link it to climate change.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

A heatwave linked to dozens of deaths is moving east across Europe, bringing temperatures near 40°C and testing records. Scientists state manmade climate change made this heatwave virtually impossible without it.

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Germany and other parts of Europe are braced for sweltering conditions this weekend as a heatwave linked to dozens of deaths moves east and bring temperatures approaching 40 ⁠degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) to the region.

Britain, France and Switzerland have baked in record heat in June, and the system was expected to test more records as the heatwave crosses the Rhine River.

In France, dozens of people including both ​young ⁠and old have died during the heatwave. Temperatures above 40 C have disrupted rail travel and power, sparked alcohol bans, suspended schools and postponed outdoor events.

Public broadcaster ARD said a German record of over 41 C was reached on Friday near Saarbruecken on the border with France, according to preliminary ⁠official data.

"The heatwave is going to ⁠peak at the weekend, well over 40 degrees in some parts of Germany," said Karsten Brandt, ​a meteorologist at ⁠weather forecasting site Donnerwetter.de.

The Ironman European ‌Championship long-distance triathlon taking place on Sunday in Frankfurt shortened the cycling and running courses due to the heat, organisers said.

German national ‌rail operator Deutsche Bahn has given customers the option of cancelling long-distance travel bookings into early next week without charge due to the heatwave.

The company said its infrastructure is under particular strain because of sun exposure and additional risk to signals, tracks and ⁠overhead wires stemming from thunderstorms and wildfires.

Parts of Germany, mainly in the southwest, have already experienced a much hotter June than usual.

The most extreme heat is forecast to begin fading at the weekend, with heavy thunderstorms expected on Sunday. Across Europe, cultural landmarks have had to close, farming has suffered and some hospitals have struggled to cope. The heatwave has pushed temperatures up to 18 C above their seasonal average, according to the Reuters Climate Monitor, and is being driven by a phenomenon known as an Omega block.

This ‌weather pattern traps a bulging ball of hot air over regions for extended periods, ​with cooler air on its fringes. Demand for electric fans has shot up, and Asian ‌air conditioning makers reported a European sales boom. Most ⁠of the housing stock in Northern Europe is not built to temper heat but rather ⁠to keep it in.

The present heatwave will begin shifting by the end of the month, hitting Central Europe and the Balkans, ‌the World Meteorological Organisation said.

Scientists said ​the heatwave would have been virtually impossible without manmade ‌climate change, which has made this week's night-time ​temperatures 100 times more likely than they would have been even two decades ago.

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Heavy thunderstorms expected to break the heatwave on Sunday.

    Likely · Within days

  • Heatwave to shift towards Central Europe and the Balkans by month's end.

    Likely · Within weeks

Open Questions

  • What is the full extent of infrastructure damage?
  • How will long-term agricultural yields be affected?
  • What specific adaptation measures are being implemented?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by The Independent World.

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