What You Need to Know
• Temperatures in Europe reached 40C (104F) this summer, causing illness and infrastructure failures across the continent.
• An estimated 1,000 excess deaths occurred in France due to heatwaves averaging 29.8C (85.6F) and storms.
• A study by World Weather Attribution indicates that extreme heat events are now tens to hundreds of times more likely than in 2003.
This summer, World Health Organization Regional Director for Europe Dr. Hans Kluge reported that temperatures in Europe reached 40C (104F), leading to illness, deaths, and infrastructure failures. In France, heatwaves averaging 29.8C (85.6F) resulted in approximately 1,000 excess deaths, exacerbated by subsequent storms. Last summer’s heatwave caused an estimated 2,300 climate-related deaths across 12 European countries. The World Weather Attribution study revealed that such intense heat is now significantly more likely than it was two decades ago, with projections indicating that similar heatwaves could occur every couple of decades if current emissions rates continue.
Why It Matters
The increasing frequency and intensity of heatwaves in Europe highlight the significant impacts of climate change on public health and infrastructure. Since the 1990s, heat-related mortality has risen by an average of 52 deaths per million people annually. The European Commission’s climate change service, Copernicus, reports that Europe has warmed at approximately twice the global average since the 1980s. This trend underscores the urgent need for effective climate policies and adaptation strategies to mitigate the effects of rising temperatures on vulnerable populations.
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