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Europe's Scorching Summer Shatters Records
10 Jul
Summary
- Europe recorded its hottest June ever, with multiple countries breaking all-time records.
- Over 2,000 deaths are linked to the relentless heatwave affecting Western and Central Europe.
- France and Spain experienced extreme temperatures, leading to school closures and public health alerts.

Europe experienced its hottest June ever in 2026, marked by an unprecedented heatwave that toppled national and local temperature records across the continent. Germany, Czechia, Poland, and Hungary all recorded their highest temperatures in history within a 24-hour span.
The extreme heat, which began in May, has been linked to over 2,000 deaths across Western and Central Europe. France reported its hottest June day on record, with localized readings exceeding 109.4 degrees Fahrenheit. In Spain, temperatures soared, leading to significant heat-related fatalities and exposing a large percentage of the population to dangerous heat.
Numerous countries, including the UK, Wales, Slovenia, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands, and Denmark, also broke June or all-time records. The heatwave strained public services, caused school closures, and led to temporary closures of major attractions like the Louvre and Eiffel Tower in Paris. Scientists attribute these extreme weather patterns to a climate increasingly prone to such events, exacerbated by persistent drought conditions fueling wildfires.