The Guardian (USA)

Spain and southern France hit by second extreme heat event of year

- Jon Henley Europe correspond­ent

A second extreme heat event of the year is searing Spain and southern France, with temperatur­es hitting highs not normally recorded until July or August and experts warning summer heatwaves are happening earlier and more often.

The French state forecaster, Météo France, said temperatur­es had already exceeded 35C close to the Mediterran­ean and would rise further from midweek as the hot air mass moved northwards, with parts of the southwest and Rhone valley reaching 39C.

Even in Alsace, Brittany and the greater Paris region, temperatur­es were expected to reach – and in some areas significan­tly exceed – 30C, the forecaster Patrick Galois said, adding that the French capital could hit 35C on Thursday.

Galois said such events “very rarely” occurred in June and then only at the end of the month. “If this episode is confirmed, it will be a record in terms of how early it has occurred,” he said. Previous

extreme temperatur­e episodes in June, such as in 2005 and 2017, had not begun to develop before at least the 18th of the month, he said.

The episode’s peak should be reached between Thursday and Saturday, Méteo France said, adding that it was being fuelled by an Atlantic lowpressur­e system between the Azores islands and Madeira, favouring the uprising of warm air in western Europe.

Besides sustained unusually high daytime temperatur­es, the mercury was also unlikely to fall below 20C in several areas overnight, the French forecaster said, potentiall­y qualifying the episode as a heatwave in some regions.

For an extreme heat event to be formally categorise­d as a heatwave, temperatur­es must normally exceed set day- and night-time values that vary region by region for a continuous period of at least three days.

In neighbouri­ng Spain, early June temperatur­es are the hottest recorded in at least 20 years, with 40C recorded over the weekend in Seville and nearby Córdoba, 42C in the Guadiana valley in Extremadur­a and 43C in other parts of southern Spain.

“We are facing unusually high temperatur­es for June,” a spokespers­on for Aemet, the state meteorolog­ical office, said, adding that the latest episode was the third-earliest on record and the first to arrive this early since 1981.

The forecaster has said global heating meant Spain’s summer now began between 20 and 40 days earlier than it did 50 years ago. Last year was Spain’s hottest and driest on record,

with temperatur­es hitting an all-time high of 47.4C in Córdoba province.

The extreme heat episodes in the two countries follow the hottest May on record in France and Spain. France recorded temperatur­es exceeding 38C – about 17C hotter than the seasonal average – in some parts of the south last month.

The southern towns of Albi, Toulouse and Montélimar all equalled or exceeded their previous records for the month of May, registerin­g 33.7C, 33.4C and 33.8C, while even north-western Normandy reached 27C, breaking a May record dating back to 1922.

In Spain, a mass of hot, dry air blowing in from Africa led to “exceptiona­lly high” daily temperatur­es between 10C and 15C above some local monthly averages in a May heatwave of “extraordin­ary and exceptiona­l intensity”.

Spain recorded its highest ever temperatur­e, 47.4C, last August in the

Andalucían town of Montoro. France’s record was registered during the 2019

European heatwave, when Vérargues in the Hérault départemen­t hit 46C.

Drought is also becoming an increasing concern, with 35 French départemen­tsalready having imposed water restrictio­ns. Almost the whole of Portugal had been classified as being in “severe drought” by the end of May, according to the national weather service Ipma.

Last month was the country’s hottest May since 1931, with the average temperatur­e more than 3C higher than usual and with average rainfall of just under 9mm – roughly 13% of the normal level. Just over 97% of Portugal is in “severe drought”.

“This deficit in rainfall is in line with the trend of the last 20 years, marked by more frequent dry periods as a result of climate change,” said Vanda Pires, an Ipma climatolog­ist, adding that temperatur­es could also reach 40C in Portugal this week.

 ?? ?? A field of potatoes being irrigated at sunset as a heatwave hits Europe, in Aubencheul-au-Bac, France. Photograph: Pascal Rossignol/ Reuters
A field of potatoes being irrigated at sunset as a heatwave hits Europe, in Aubencheul-au-Bac, France. Photograph: Pascal Rossignol/ Reuters

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