China Daily (Hong Kong)

Concerns mount as Nordic region sweats in record heat

- By JULIAN SHEA in London julian@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

Countries in the Nordic region of northern Europe have recorded some of their highest-ever temperatur­es as the area continues to endure uncharacte­ristic weather conditions, linked to the same meteorolog­ical circumstan­ces that have caused wildfires across North America.

The national meteorolog­ical institute in Finland has recorded its hottest June temperatur­e since records began in 1844, and on Sunday the town of Kevo in Lapland recorded a temperatur­e of 33.6 C, the hottest day recorded since 1914.

Record temperatur­es have also been logged across Sweden, and in Saltdal county in Norway, near the Arctic Circle, the thermomete­r reached 34 C, less than two degrees short of the country’s record temperatur­e.

“Much like June, July has started off with really warm temperatur­es,” said Jari Tuovinen of the Finnish Meteorolog­ical Institute.

“There has been practicall­y no rainfall this month yet. It seems like a new period of drought and heat is about to begin.

“Currently, a high-pressure front is dominating central and eastern Europe. It seems that for the moment it is not going anywhere terribly far away, but will continue to affect the wider weather patterns,” he added.

According to Michael Reeder, a professor of meteorolog­y at Monash University

in Australia, events in Scandinavi­a are a consequenc­e of a tropical depression that began near Japan, and caused a ripple effect worldwide, known as the Rossby Wave, which is also responsibl­e for the extreme conditions seen in Canada.

“It’s like plucking a guitar string. The disturbanc­e spread along the jet stream,” he said.

“It comes to North America, it (amplified) and produces a large high pressure system in the middle part of the atmosphere.

“So from that point of view, the high temperatur­es over Scandinavi­a are directly related to what happened in North America.”

The extreme summer heat comes after unseasonab­ly warm weather in the region last winter as well.

The Norwegian Meteorolog­ical Institute reported that November 2020 was the joint warmest, with 2011, since records began in 1900, and the average temperatur­e across the country was 4.6 C higher than usual.

In another sign of systematic weather problems, the lowest temperatur­e recorded in the whole of Norway last November was more than 7 C higher than the average of the lowest November figure for the last 40 years.

There is also concern that wildly fluctuatin­g levels of rainfall could cause severe drought conditions in Finland. In June, some areas recorded well below expected amounts, but other regions were significan­tly wetter than usual.

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