
Attribution study finds Europe’s record June heatwave ‘virtually impossible’ without climate change
Scientists say the extreme temperatures that killed hundreds and overwhelmed hospitals were made at least 100 times more likely by human-caused warming, as the heat shifts eastward.
The heatwave that has shattered June temperature records across western Europe would have been “virtually impossible” in the climate of 1976, according to a rapid attribution study published Friday by the World Weather Attribution (WWA) group. The analysis, which examined observed and forecast data from 854 cities across 30 European countries, found that a similar event half a century ago would have been 3.5°C cooler during the day and 2.4°C cooler at night. The researchers calculated that the sweltering overnight temperatures now keeping millions awake are roughly 100 times more probable today than during the deadly 2003 European heatwave, while daytime peaks are about 10 times more likely. The study explicitly ruled out any role for the El Niño phenomenon, attributing the intensity of the heat unequivocally to the burning of fossil fuels.
Across the continent, the human and infrastructural toll mounted. France’s sports minister reported 55 drownings since the heatwave began, with 65 per cent occurring at unsupervised or prohibited swimming sites. In Paris, where temperatures reached 40.9°C, police banned public alcohol consumption and ordered the cancellation of major weekend events—including the Pride march, the Solidays music festival, and a Diamond League athletics meeting—to relieve pressure on emergency rooms that officials described as nearing saturation. Spain’s mortality monitoring system linked 212 deaths between Sunday and Wednesday to the extreme temperatures. In Germany, a section of the A2 motorway buckled in the heat, damaging 30 vehicles and forcing a weekend closure, while the national weather service warned that the 40°C threshold could be breached for three consecutive days.
Economic analysts are now quantifying the medium-term costs. Allianz Trade identified extreme heat as a “structural economic risk” for Europe, estimating that a repeat of the five hottest years from the past decade could cumulatively shave 5 to 7 per cent off GDP by 2030 in France, Italy, Germany, and Spain—losses of $240 billion, $147 billion, $131 billion, and $120 billion respectively. European Central Bank research has shown that summer heatwaves reduce regional output by about 1 per cent, with the drag intensifying to 1.5 per cent after two years, partly through disrupted supply chains and higher food prices. The Banque de France’s governor noted a clear negative effect on medium-term growth.
The heat dome responsible for the extremes—a blocked high-pressure pattern known as an Omega block—is now drifting eastward. Forecasts for the weekend place Germany, Poland, and parts of central Europe under exceptional heat stress, with highs of 40°C to 43°C possible in Brandenburg and along the Polish border. The Austrian Grand Prix declared a heat hazard, and the Netherlands issued its first-ever nationwide red alert. The WWA study noted that 45 per cent of the cities analysed have already broken or are expected to break their historical records for wet-bulb globe temperature, a measure of heat stress that accounts for humidity. The next milestone will be the actual mortality data from national health agencies, which typically lag by several weeks, and the degree to which governments accelerate adaptation measures such as cooling infrastructure and workplace heat standards.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
The record-shattering heatwave gripping Europe would have been virtually impossible just 50 years ago. Scientists warn that human-caused climate change is making such extreme events far more likely, disrupting daily life and straining infrastructure. The analysis underscores the urgent need to address the accelerating climate crisis.
Climate change is unequivocally responsible for the intensity of the heatwave scorching Western Europe. The study shows that without human-caused warming, daytime temperatures would have been 3.5°C lower and the event would have been virtually impossible 50 years ago. The findings are a stark warning that the impossible has become possible.
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