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After a scorching July, the Swedish capital's residents are being told to conserve water.

After a scorching July, the Swedish capital's residents are being told to conserve water.

Authorities have warned Swedes to conserve water in an area surrounding the capital Stockholm after a warm summer that pushed temperatures to new records across Scandinavia.

Stockholm's city officials said that high temperatures in Lake Malaren, a source of water for 2 million people, had decreased the amount of water available from the tap.

Residents in the capital and its surrounding areas were told to reduce their shower time, stop filling swimming pools, and stop watering gardens or cleaning cars. This is unusual advice for a country that is known for its lakes.

Stockholm Water and Waste stated in a press release that "every drop counts".

Europe was wracked by a heatwave that lasted for most of July. In some areas, temperatures reached over 40 degrees Celsius. This caused wildfires to break out and killed hundreds. Scientists warn that such events will become more frequent and intense as global warming continues.

Erik Kjellstrom is a professor of climatology at Sweden's Meteorological and Hydrological Institute.

The winters are shorter and milder, and the summers are longer and warmer.

In parts of Sweden, July was the hottest month in 100 years. The far north was worst affected.

According to the Institute, Jokkmokk (just north of the Arctic Circle) has recorded 15 consecutive days of temperatures above 25 degrees Celsius.

Oslo, the capital of Norway, has also had trouble filling its reservoirs this year due to less than usual precipitation. A spokesperson for the city’s water authority stated that residents have been asked to limit their voluntary water consumption since late July.

For 26 consecutive days, temperatures in Ylitornio in Finland, near Santa Claus Village, Rovaniemi, were above 25 degrees.

According to a recent study by the climate research group World Weather Attribution, "similar events are at least 10 times more likely now than in a preindustrial environment without human-caused heating."

According to the EU Copernicus Climate Change Service the average global temperature surface reached 16,68 degrees Celsius in the month of July, which was 0.45 degrees higher than the average 1991-2020 for that month.

(source: Reuters)