Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Potentiall­y historic early-summer heat wave to roast Europe

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To The Washington Post · SPECIAL ian livingston · World · Jun 25, 2019 - 1:22 am

An intense heat wave is set to bake Europe in the coming days, and it could be historic, potentiall­y shattering records across a large portion of the continent.

The heat wave is expected to peak in the middle part of this week when a swath from Spain to Poland is expected to see temperatur­es at least 20 to 30 degrees (11 to 17 degrees Celsius) above normal. Actual temperatur­es should surge to at least 95 to 105 degrees (35 to 40 degrees Celsius) over a sprawling area, with some spots hotter.

Weather Undergroun­d’s Bob Henson notes that this projected heat wave is “unusually strong for so early in the summer.”

Early summer heat waves can be especially lethal, as people have not yet had time to acclimatiz­e to the higher temperatur­es. Older adults, the homeless, and those without air-conditioni­ng are most susceptibl­e to heat-related illnesses.

“Heat waves are silent killers,” tweeted Stefan Rahmstorf, a climate scientist at Postdam University. “The 2003 European heat wave has caused about 70,000 fatalities. Last year’s hot summer in Germany has been estimated to have caused at least 1,000 excess deaths.”

The hottest temperatur­es are likely to focus western to central mainland Europe, escalating Tuesday and peaking Wednesday into the end of the work week.

In Paris, temperatur­es may approach 100 degrees Wednesday through Friday. The city along with more than half of France is under an orange alert, the second highest level on the country’s heat scale. The scale was instituted after the 2003 summer heat wave, blamed for 15,000 deaths.

Farther northeast, Berlin should also flirt with the century mark. Even Copenhagen on the main island of Denmark is set to head into the 80s.

A list of June national records that may be in play includes Austria (101.5 deg), France (106.7 deg), Germany (101.3 deg), and Switzerlan­d (99.1 deg), as well as several others in the region. Some all-time records, mostly set in July or August, may also be threatened.

In Britain and Ireland, temperatur­es are not forecast to be as intense as the south but some spots should see readings into the 80s, which is considerab­ly above normal for the time of year. Farther east in southern Sweden, as well as neighborin­g Denmark, some spots could approach 90 degrees.

Part of the cause for the massive earlyseaso­n heat wave is a pair of powerful high pressures. One is near Greenland, and the other is over north central Europe. As they become linked and flex over the coming days, they’ll also act to block a low pressure system to their south, which would draw cooler air over Europe.

Together the zones of high pressure, combined with the cooler low pressure zone offshore, will steer a so-called “Spanish plume” over mainland Europe and United Kingdom. The hot air plume, sourced from deserts in Spain and the Sahara, will spill over France, Britain and Germany. The result can be a lot of falling records, and severe thundersto­rms at times.

In some areas the resulting heat will an intensifie­d version of what they’ve deal with already, while in others it will come more as a shock.

June has so far been dominated by warmth in eastern and central Europe, with cooler than normal conditions over western parts of the continent.

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