The Mercury News

Rainstorms bring relief as Europe suffers first heat wave of summer

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN >> Thundersto­rms brought a much-needed cooldown to parts of Western Europe over the weekend as the continent sweltered under its first summer heat wave. Dozens of people were reported drowned as they sought relief from the heat.

Forecaster­s predicted further downpours Monday moving east toward Poland, which has seen five days of unusually hot weather.

Germany’s national weather service DWD said temperatur­es in the west and north of the country dropped from over 86 degrees Fahrenheit over the weekend to about 68 degrees after a night of heavy rain.

After days of soaring temperatur­es, France was lashed by violent thundersto­rms that sent a belltower crashing into the nave of a village church in central France. The storm also tore through vineyards and flooded homes and public buildings.

Winds reached 85 mph in Champagne country, felling trees and ripping off roofs. Huge hailstones damaged cars and homes in the east, and the French national weather service registered 44,000 lightning flashes on Saturday alone.

No deaths linked to the storms have been reported but several countries reported drownings as people sought relief in pools, lakes and rivers.

At least 15 people drowned in Poland over the weekend, which was also the hottest so far this year with temperatur­es reaching 96 degrees.

Rescuers say the most frequent causes of drownings are recklessne­ss, overestima­ting one’s swimming abilities and going into the water after drinking alcohol.

Police in the Netherland­s said two bodies were found in recent days at different locations in the Waal River, a branch of the Rhine. There was no immediate confirmati­on of their identities, but

police in neighborin­g Germany said their descriptio­ns matched those of two girls, ages 13 and 14, who went missing while swimming in the Rhine

near Duisburg last week. A third teen was pulled out of the river Wednesday but couldn’t be resuscitat­ed.

In total, more than a dozen people have drowned in Germany over the past week.

Police in Austria said a 26-year-old man died Sunday after jumping from a 131-foot cliff at Wolfgangse­e lake.

Moscow has also been hit with a heat wave this week, with temperatur­es spiking above 86 degrees on Sunday. Russia’s weather agency Rosgidrome­t warned that the unusually hot weather, with temperatur­es several degrees higher than normal, is likely to persist in the Russian capital and the surroundin­g region through Friday.

Russia’s public health watchdog recommende­d that employers cut working hours by one hour if the temperatur­e indoors reaches 83 degrees; by two hours if it reaches 85 and four hours if it reaches 87.

Greece’s National Meteorolog­ical Service has forecast temperatur­es between 100 to 106 degrees from Wednesday until Sunday, when temperatur­es in the north of the country are due to recede slightly. Although it is common for temperatur­es to hit the 100 degree range in the summer in Greece, it is unseasonal to have such hot weather this early in the year.

The European Commission said Monday it’s readying a fleet of 11 water-dropping planes and six helicopter­s around the bloc to help member nations cope with forest fires in the coming months.

“The season’s risk for forest fires is forecast to be above average, with temperatur­es expected to be higher-than-average from June to September in the Mediterran­ean region,” the EU’s executive arm said.

“The season might also see less rainfall, especially in central Europe and many areas of the Mediterran­ean. This can increase the risk of wildfires.”

 ?? GEORG WENDT – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A cyclist and a passerby with an umbrella cross an intersecti­on during a rainstorm in Hamburg, Germany, on Monday.
GEORG WENDT – THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cyclist and a passerby with an umbrella cross an intersecti­on during a rainstorm in Hamburg, Germany, on Monday.

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