Carpentras: Several European nations are currently grappling with an unprecedented and ferocious heatwave, which has claimed the lives of at least 18 people in France, including two young children, while shattering long-standing temperature records across major cities.
In southeastern France, tragedy struck the town of Carpentras where two children, aged two and four, were discovered unconscious inside a vehicle. Additionally, three elderly citizens between the ages of 80 and 95 lost their lives in the Bordeaux region after their health rapidly deteriorated due to the extreme heat. The soaring temperatures also triggered a surge in accidental drownings, with French authorities reporting that 13 more individuals lost their lives while swimming over Sunday and Monday as people desperately sought relief from the blistering conditions.
Meteorological records are tumbling across the continent. In the French city of Bordeaux, the mercury soared to a record-breaking 41.9°C. The city of Poitiers logged an astonishing 41.2°C, effectively obliterating a regional temperature record that had stood since 1947. The scorching weather front is expanding across borders, with San Sebastián in Spain preparing for temperatures to touch the 40°C mark.
In the United Kingdom, the Met Office issued urgent warnings that a four-day extreme heatwave could push temperatures well past 39°C. This spike threatens to surpass the historic June temperature records previously established in 1957 and 1976. Meanwhile, Italy has placed 12 major cities under a strict red alert. In Turin, a massive surge in power consumption for cooling has severely strained the local electrical grid, forcing utility companies to deploy emergency backup generators and extend employee shifts to prevent widespread blackouts.
The intense heat is also devastating local wildlife. In Belgium, a wildlife rehabilitation centre in Temploux admitted more than 150 distressed birds and animals over a three-day period. Environmental experts noted that rooftop temperatures are reaching a scorching 50°C to 60°C, forcing panicked young birds to leap prematurely from their nests to escape the heat. Climate scientists emphasize that human-induced climate change is directly driving the rising intensity and frequency of these severe heatwaves, creating increasingly dangerous meteorological conditions across the globe.