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Europe on alert as deadly heat spreads

Health authorities in Europe were on alert as a deadly heatwave swept across the continent on Friday. Alcohol bans were imposed in France and road surfaces cracked open across Germany. Europe was sweltering under a heatwave that broke all records. From Britain to France, Germany, Italy, Austria, and Serbia, Europe was engulfed in a ball of heat. Scientists have said that this heatwave is the worst ever recorded in Europe. The climate there is changing more rapidly than anywhere else.

In France and Britain where June records were broken, temperatures are likely past their peak. In Italy, however, temperatures were expected to rise into the weekend. The first 40-degree Celsius readings for the summer will be recorded.

In France, temperatures in Paris reached 40.9 C Wednesday. Authorities were prepared for more deaths, even though temperatures were predicted to drop. Cultural landmarks and agriculture have suffered across the continent. Paris police has asked organizers of major events to cancel them, including the Solidays Music Festival. The organizers of the Pride Festival said that they would reschedule.

ENGLAND AND NETHERLANDS AT CODE RED

According to BZ, extreme?heat on Thursday evening caused the A2 motorway surface in eastern Germany, to buckle and rupture across several lanes, damaging 30 vehicles and causing two minor injuries. The highway was closed.

The Met Office in Britain has extended the red heat alert to Friday for an area covering a lot of southern England. This is the first time that such warnings were issued three days consecutively.

Many schools were closed due to temperatures of up to 40 C.

Temperatures of 36 C are expected in Serbia. Belgrade officials warned residents to stay inside and drink water during the hot hours. In Britain, fans flew off shelves and Asian air conditioner manufacturers reported an increase in European sales. In France, EDF, the power utility owned by the government, has pledged to invest EUR80 million ($90 millions) in cooling systems for schools, kindergartens, and daycare centers.

The latest data, published in July 2025 by the International Energy Agency (IEA), an OECD member, shows that household air conditioning ownership in Europe is still relatively low at 20%.

'OMEGA BLOCKS' HEAT BULGE OVER EUROPE According to Climate Monitor, the heatwave that has pushed temperatures up to 18 C higher than their average seasonal temperature is driven by a weather -pattern called an Omega block.

This traps a ball of hot, humid air in a region for extended periods. The cooler weather is on the edges.

Scientists say the heatwave that broke records would have been "virtually unachievable" without climate change caused by humans. Climate change has increased the likelihood of this week's oppressive night temperatures by 100 times compared to 20 years ago.

In their latest analysis, the World Weather Attribution Group of climate scientists stated that "over the?region studied this heatwave was the most severe ever observed."

"APOCALYPTIC" FOR HEALTH STAFF

The French authorities banned the consumption of alcohol in public on Friday when France was due to play Norway in Boston at the World Cup.

French doctors and hospital workers reported an increased number of emergency calls and treatments.

Wilfrid Smut, spokesperson of the Association of Emergency Room Doctors of France said that hospitals were not prepared for the heatwave.

He said that the impact of mental illness on healthcare workers was enormous. "It's apocalyptic."

(source: Reuters)