The Guardian (USA)

Southern Europe braces for second heat storm in a week

- Lisa O'Carroll in Brussels, Angela Giuffrida in Rome, and Helena Smith in Athens

Southern Europe is bracing for a second heat storm in a week, with Italy, Greece and Spain, along with Morocco and other Mediterran­ean countries, being told temperatur­e records could be broken on Tuesday.

A new anticyclon­e that pushed into the region from north Africa on Sunday could lift temperatur­es above the record 48.8C (120F) seen in Sicily in August 2021, and follows last week’s Cerberus heatwave.

The European Space Agency (ESA) said the next week could bring the hottest temperatur­es ever recorded in Europe in a heatwave named Charon after the Greek mythologic­al boatman who ferries souls to the underworld.

The human-caused climate crisis is supercharg­ing extreme weather around the world, driving more frequent and more deadly disasters, from heatwaves to floods to wildfires.

On Monday, the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on said the planet experience­d the hottest few days on record in the first few days of July, after a June that was the hottest on record according to the ESA.

A study recently published in

Nature Medicine said more than 60,000 people died because of last year’s summer heatwaves across Europe, with the highest mortality rates seen in Italy, Greece, Spain and Portugal.

Italy sweltered in exceptiona­lly high temperatur­es and humidity levels on Sunday in what the weather website ILMeteo.it described as a “heat storm”, and the situation will intensify with the arrival on Monday of another anticyclon­e that will push the mercury to possible highs of 47C in southern areas of Sardinia, and 45C or 46C in parts of Puglia and Sicily.

Temperatur­es in Rome, which is packed with tourists, are poised to climb to 42C or 43C on Tuesday. Sixteen Italian cities, including Rome, Florence, Bologna, Bari, Cagliari and Palermo, have been put on “red alert” by the health ministry, meaning the heat is so intense it poses a threat to the health of the entire population.

Nighttime temperatur­es remain above 20C, making it a struggle for people to sleep.

Italy is one of the European countries most vulnerable to the effects of climate change, with extreme weath

er events within the past 13 months responsibl­e for more than 50 deaths.

Luca Mercalli, the president of the Italian Meteorolog­ical Society, said there was “no doubt” the heatwaves were linked to global heating.

“It is much easier to connect a heatwave to global warming than, say, flooding,” he added. “Floods have a component linked to climate change but we don’t know to what extent, and so it is more delicate to say a flood is caused by [the climate crisis]. Instead, with the heat there is no doubt – it is the most direct phenomenon that we can perceive.”

The ESA said: “Italy, Spain, France, Germany and Poland are all facing a major heatwave with air temperatur­es expected to climb to 48C on the islands of Sicily and Sardinia.”

Morocco is among the north African countries slated for above-average temperatur­es, with highs of 47C in some provinces recorded this weekend – more typical of August than July – sparking concerns over water shortages, the meteorolog­ical service said.

On the Canary island of La Palma, more than 4,000 people were evacuated from properties after a forest fire swept through the north-west of the island.

The regional government said on Sunday it had put neighbouri­ng islands including Tenerife and Gran Canaria on alert for risk of forest fires, with 4,500 hectares of land and a dozen homes already destroyed in La Palma.

“The fire advanced very quickly,” said Fernando Clavijo, the president of the Canary Islands regional government. He blamed “the wind, the climate conditions as well as the heatwave that we are living through” for the swift spread of the blaze.

In Greece, scorching heat forced the Acropolis to close temporaril­y between 11.30am and 5.30pm to protect tourists from dangerous temperatur­es, risk of dehydratio­n and sunstroke.

Winds provided some respite and the temperatur­es dropped by as much as 4C in some parts of the country.

But leading weatherman Sakis Arnaoutogl­ou warned the hiatus would be brief and predicted the mercury would rise “above 41C” from Thursday for six consecutiv­e days.

The appearance of winds measuring seven on the Beaufort scale would undoubtedl­y keep temperatur­es down in the coming days, meteorolog­ists said, but they have also raised fears of forest fires feeding on land parched by intense heat.

“After the heatwave and the dryness [caused by it], we have the meltemi [strong, dry] winds, which multiply the risk of fire,” the Greek minister of climate crisis and civil protection, Vassilis Kikilias, said. “And if that wasn’t enough when the winds die down we’ll have a heatwave again … we are in the worst, and most difficult, climatic conditions possible for fires to occur.”

Unrelentin­g temperatur­es are also being felt in the US, where sweltering conditions over the weekend put more than one-third of Americans under extreme heat alerts.

The US National Weather Service (NWS) reported that a heatwave stretching from California to Texas was expected to peak during an “extremely hot and dangerous weekend”.

Death Valley national park – often among the hottest places on Earth – was expected to equal or surpass its heat record of 54.4C. Las Vegas could experience three consecutiv­e days with a high of 46C, which has happened just once before, the NWS reported. Phoenix, which has endured a two-week stretch of temperatur­es above 43C with little relief in the evening hours, was expecting its hottest weekend of the year.

Southern California is fighting numerous wildfires, including one in Riverside County that has burned more than 3,000 hectares (7,500 acres) and prompted evacuation orders. Farther north, the Canadian government said wildfires had burned a record-breaking 10m hectares this year, with more damage expected.

The US national security adviser, Jake Sullivan, was asked on CNN about the global response to the climate crisis, and if it was time for the UN to stop allowing China to be categorise­d as a developing nation when it comes to emissions cuts.

Sullivan said that the US climate envoy, John Kerry, would make the point during his trip to Beijing, which began on Sunday, that there was “more work for them to do on that front” and that “every country including China has a responsibi­lity to reduce emissions” and China should be encouraged to “take far more dramatic action”.

Japan issued heatstroke alerts to tens of millions of people in 20 of its 47 prefecture­s as near-record high temperatur­es scorched large areas and torrential rain pummelled other regions.

“Every time we’re visiting somewhere there seems to be a heatwave or like a rare weather disaster,” said Anthony Fernandez, a Texan tourist, in Tokyo. “It’s kind of becoming like the new normal … climate change is a big concern.”

The national broadcaste­r NHK said the heat was life-threatenin­g, with the capital and other places recording nearly 40C. Japan’s highest temperatur­e ever – 41.1C recorded in Kumagaya city, Saitama, in 2018 – could be beaten, according to the meteorolog­ical agency.

Some places experience­d their highest temperatur­es in more than four decades on Saturday, including Hirono in Fukushima prefecture, with 37.3C.

The Copernicus Climate Change Service said June 2023 was just over 0.5C above the 1991-2020 June average, with unpreceden­ted sea temperatur­es and record low Antarctic sea ice.

 ?? Photograph: Luis G Morera/EPA ?? Smoke billows from the town of Los Llanos de Aridane during a forest fire in Puntagorda, La Palma, on Saturday.
Photograph: Luis G Morera/EPA Smoke billows from the town of Los Llanos de Aridane during a forest fire in Puntagorda, La Palma, on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States