Dangerous temperatures forecast for central and eastern Europe
Red warnings issued as record-breaking heatwave pushes east, with authorities urging people to stay indoors
Red warnings issued as record-breaking heatwave pushes east, with authorities urging people to stay indoors
A record-breaking heat wave has overwhelmed mortuaries in Paris, leaving funeral directors struggling to find space for bodies
France has reported around 1,000 additional deaths during last week’s record-breaking heat wave, as European cities see more record temperatures.
More than 191m people in Europe face temperatures over 35C, with extreme heat warnings from Germany to Hungary
A heat wave is hitting Central and Eastern Europe, with record temperatures in Switzerland, Germany, the Czech Republic and Denmark.
The heat is changing the continent’s interest in cooling technologies of all kinds.
Authorities are attempting to reduce the pressure on hospitals as the city swelters under extreme heat.
“It is just unbearable,” one Paris resident said.
More than a dozen countries have issued urgent heat warnings. France saw its highest average temperature ever on Tuesday.
A heat-related power outage left around 68,000 homes without electricity in western France as record-breaking heat sweeps Europe.
Increased extreme weather tied to human-caused climate change leads the UN climate agency to say the next five years should shatter more heat records.
French Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu said 40 people who died by drowning since last Thursday were mainly young people.
Several European countries issued red weather alerts as a fresh bout of extreme heat pushed temperatures beyond 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit).
Only 20% European homes have AC, compared to 90% in the U.S., but as the climate changes, that vast gulf may be set to shrink.