Fossil fuel emissions have rapidly worsened European heatwaves in a few decades
4 hours ago
- #Climate Change
- #Heatwave Impact
- #Public Health
- Europe is experiencing a severe June 2026 heatwave, with temperatures 5–12°C above seasonal averages, breaking records and driven by a high-pressure system bringing hot air from North Africa.
- Heatwaves cause significant mortality; over 60,000 died in 2022, and even cooler summers see tens of thousands of heat-related deaths, with this event already causing fatalities and health system strain across multiple countries.
- Impacts extend beyond health, including increased wildfire risk, infrastructure disruptions (e.g., rail and power outages), surging cooling demand, drought conditions, and stress on energy systems and ecosystems.
- Human-induced climate change has made such heatwaves much more likely and intense; temperatures now are 3.5°C hotter than in 1976 and 2°C hotter than in 2003, with nighttime warming even more pronounced.
- Vulnerability to heat is heightened by aging populations, chronic illness, socioeconomic disparities, and inadequate infrastructure, emphasizing the need for equitable adaptation and heat-resilient policies.
- The Wet Bulb Globe Temperature (WBGT) analysis shows 45% of European cities broke indoor thresholds during this heatwave, indicating severe combined heat and humidity stress, especially in urban areas with heat island effects.
- At 1.4°C of global warming, extreme heat is pushing societal coping limits, underscoring the urgency of phasing out fossil fuels to prevent future escalation of such events.