Europe is reeling under a heatwave caused by an unprecedented high-pressure weather phenomenon. Temperatures are at record June highs in Germany, France, Poland and the Czech Republic. In France, the mercury hit 42.3°C on Thursday, beating the previous record of 41.5°C from the summer of 2003 (when around 15,000 people died across the country of heat-related causes).
Poland’s Radzyń registered a new national heat record of 38.2°C on Wednesday. The same day, temperatures in the Czech Republic rose to a record 38.9°C, and to 38.6°C in Germany. All-time heat records were also set in Switzerland, Austria, and Italy on Wednesday and Thursday. In Spain, temperatures in excess of 40°C aided the spread of a wildfire in Catalonia that has burned about 54 sq.km. of land.
Experts think the heatwave is caused by a high-pressure weather system called an ‘upper ridge’ that is trapping warm air coming in from the Mediterranean and North Africa regions. The heatwave may continue over the weekend before easing next week.
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