Heatwave breaks more records in northern and central Europe
Europe has experienced another day of extreme heat with temperature records being broken across the continent again on Saturday. Germany set a new all-time high
Europe has experienced another day of extreme heat with temperature records being broken across the continent again on Saturday. Germany set a new all-time high for the second day in a row, as temperatures reached 41.5C, according to provisional data. On Saturday, records also fell in Denmark and the Czech Republic as the unprecedented early summer heatwave moved further north and east affecting more people.
An estimated 150 million people in Europe are now experiencing temperatures of over 35C. The World Meteorological Organization has warned the heatwave would have "major impacts" to health and ecosystems. The heatwave – which began in the Iberian peninsula – has been linked to the deaths of hundreds of people over the past week.
Germany's preliminary record of 41.5C was set in Möckern-Drewitz in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, Germany's Meteorological Service said. That surpassed a record of 41.3C set just a day earlier in Saarbrucken near the French border. "This heat isn't pleasant summer weather. It's a health crisis," Katrin Goering-Eckardt, a German politician and former leader of the Green Party, said on X.
In Berlin, police deployed two water cannons to spray mist onto people.
