The Guardian (USA)

Nordic countries endure heatwave as Lapland records hottest day since 1914

- Lisa Cox and agencies

Nordic countries have registered nearrecord temperatur­es over the weekend, including highs of 34C (93.2F) in some places.

The latest figures came after Finland’s national meteorolog­ical institute registered its hottest temperatur­e for June since records began in 1844.

Kevo, in Lapland, recorded heat of 33.6C (92.5F) on Sunday, the hottest day since 1914 when authoritie­s registered 34.7C (94.5F), said the STT news agency. Several parts of Sweden also reported record highs for June.

The high temperatur­es follow the record-breaking heatwave and wildfires that have caused devastatio­n in parts of North America.

The intense heatwave has killed 95 people in the US state of Oregon alone, its governor said on Sunday. Hundreds are believed to have died from the heat in the US north-west and south-western Canada.

Experts and officials fear that the catastroph­ic conditions, fuelled by the climate crisis, will only get worse through the coming months.

Michael Reeder, a professor of meteorolog­y in the school of Earth, atmosphere and environmen­t at Australia’s Monash University, said the events on the European and North American continents were linked.

Reeder has written about the meteorolog­ical conditions that allowed for the North American heatwave to form. He said a tropical low in the western Pacific, near Japan, had disturbed the atmosphere, creating ripples around the hemisphere as what is known as a Rossby wave.

That wave broke off the west of Canada, triggering the conditions for the heatwave.

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

“It gets to North America, it (amplified) and produced a big high pressure system in the middle part of the atmosphere.”

He said that had then kicked off another wave over the north Atlantic that then broke and produced the conditions for high temperatur­es in the Nordic regions.

“So from that perspectiv­e, the high temperatur­es over Scandinavi­a are directly linked to what happened in North America.”

At a national level, June 2021 was the third-hottest ever recorded in Sweden.

And Norway’s meteorolog­ical institute registered 34C (93.2F) in Saltdal, a county near the Polar Circle. That is the highest temperatur­e measured in the country this year, and just 1.6C (2.9F) short of Norway’s all-time record.

Canada is battling a string of forest fires in the western province of British Columbia after sweltering under temperatur­es of up to 49.6C (121.3F), a new national record.

Several parts of the world have already experience­d crushing heatwaves this year.

In the southern hemisphere, June was also the hottest on record in New Zealand, where it is a winter month. On Thursday, the United Nations confirmed a new record high temperatur­e for the Antarctic continent – measured last year – of 18.3C (64.9F).

• This article was amended on 6 July 2021. An earlier version wrongly stated that a temperatur­e difference of 1.6C equated to 34.9F.

 ?? Photograph: LEHTIKUVA/ Reuters ?? The midnight sun shines at the border area between Finland and Norway in Kilpisjarv­i, Enontekio, Finland, on June 22, 2020. Finland’s national meteorolog­ical institute has registered its hottest temperatur­e for June since records began in 1844.
Photograph: LEHTIKUVA/ Reuters The midnight sun shines at the border area between Finland and Norway in Kilpisjarv­i, Enontekio, Finland, on June 22, 2020. Finland’s national meteorolog­ical institute has registered its hottest temperatur­e for June since records began in 1844.

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