
Europe melts in killer heatwave: Spanish woman drops dead in street as country sees 'hottest ever June' while Brit goes missing on Greek island amid warnings not to go outside at continent's holiday hotspots
Sweltering temperatures exceeded 40C (104F) across much of southern Europe over the weekend, with firefighters rallying to tackle blazes across the drying continent.
Severe heat was recorded in Italy, Greece, Spain and Portugal, with locals and tourists alike taking shelter from the sweltering conditions.
Authorities in Karpathos, Greece are now investigating the disappearance of a 55-year-old British tourist who has been missing since Friday, as meteorologists put out a health warning, anticipating air temperatures as high as 36C (97F).
In Barcelona, Spain a woman died after finishing her shift as a road sweeper on Saturday, with authorities investigating the cause. Temperatures were expected to rise as high as 34C (93F) on Monday, and hit 46C (115F) in the arid south.
This month is on course to be the hottest June on record in Spain.
Neighbouring Portugal has advised people 'not to go out' during the hottest hours, reporting heat strokes and burns as the heatwave took hold.
In Spain, temperatures reached 46C (115F) in the south, with this month set to be the hottest June on record.
A woman died after finishing her shift as a street sweeper in Barcelona on Saturday, with authorities still investigating the cause.
In Italy, a few regions were planning to ban some outdoor work activities during the hottest hours of the day in response to the record-high temperatures. Trade unions pushed the government to expand such measures at a national level.
The Italian Health Ministry placed 21 out of 27 monitored cities under its highest heat alert, including top holiday destinations like Rome, Milan and Naples.
It said it had reported a spike in heatstroke cases, mostly affecting the elderly, cancer patients and homeless people.
The heat is expected to extend north and across other parts of western Europe early this week, with Paris on course for 39C and London receiving 35C today - the hottest day of the year so far.
The summer's first major heatwave has seen authorities in the countries along the Mediterranean's northern coast urging people to seek shelter.
Ambulances stood on standby near tourist hotspots as experts warned that such heatwaves, intensified by climate change, would become more frequent.
Firefighters were on standby after blazes broke out Sunday in France and Turkey, fed by the heat and strong winds.
Already last week, Greek firefighters had to battle a forest blaze on the coast south of Athens that forced some evacuations.
The south of France dealt with an inferno of its own over the weekend as a huge blaze broke out in Aude, near Toulouse, burning through some 400 hectares of land.
Authorities believe the fire was caused by a poorly extinguished barbecue, and a suspect has been arrested.
'This is unprecedented,' Agnes Pannier-Runacher, France's ecology transition minister said as a record 84 of the nation's 96 mainland departments were placed on the second-highest 'orange' heat alert.
Only a small sliver of the country in the northwest was not sweltering, according to the Meteo France weather service, which said the heatwave was due to peak on Tuesday and Wednesday.
To the east, Greece and Turkey have been hit hard by wildfires, causing chaos for tourists as hundreds of passengers were left stranded.
A huge fire ripped through the popular resort of Foça, İzmir, in Turkey before strong winds fanned the flames and sent it towards neighbourhoods and residential areas.
One suspect has been accused of starting the fire when they allegedly set fire to their own house, and tinder-dry conditions saw the blaze spread at pace.
In the wake of the fire in Turkey, flights at İzmir Adnan Menderes Airport had closed temporarily as of 4pm local time on Sunday.
Hundreds of passengers have now been left stranded as a result of the blazes.
Planes were seen dumping large amounts of water over the infernos in an attempt to fight the blazes.
Residents watched in horror as their homes went up in flames while firefighters spent more than 22 hours tackling the huge blaze across İzmir.
The major emergency response involved 625 personnel, including six helicopters, 46 fire engines, nine bulldozers and 13 water supply vehicles.
Around 550 residents were evacuated from some 175 homes in Ilıpınar, Foça.
Four firefighters were reportedly affected by smoke poisoning, with two of them taken to hospital.
The exact cause of the fire remains unknown. Another suggestion is that the fire may have been caused by a high-voltage power line.
Governor Süleyman Elban urged residents to be cautious over the next few days.
He said low humidity and high temperatures could lead to more fires.
The governor said: 'We expect the next four or five days to be very hot, with strong winds and low humidity. These conditions are perfect for a fire.
'Everyone's life is at stake. We must all be extremely cautious.'
Wildfires were also reported in Kahramanmaraş, Bursa, Sakarya, Bilecik, Gaziantep, Bolu and Manisa this week.
Environment Minister Murat Kurum said 23 houses and 47 units in 3 villages were destroyed in forest fires in Bilecik, while 41 houses and 25 barns and warehouses were also severely damaged.
A large wildfire broke out south of Athens on Thursday, forcing evacuations and road closures near the ancient Temple of Poseidon. Strong winds spread the flames, damaging homes and sending smoke across the sky.
Greek authorities deployed 130 firefighters, 12 planes and 12 helicopters to battle the blaze, while police evacuated 40 people, with five areas under evacuation orders.
A Lancet Public Health study published last year highlighted the increasing risk of heat-related deaths because of climate change.
The study predicted that heat-related deaths could more than quadruple by midcentury under current climate policies.
The hottest place in the UK on Sunday was London's St James's Park - which hit a smouldering 31C.
The country's weather service Meteo France put a record 84 out of its 101 regional departments on an orange heatwave alert - the second-highest - for Monday.
Spain's weather service AEMET said temperatures in Extremadura and Andalusia, in the south and southwest, had reached up to 44C Sunday and issued a special warning amid the heatwave.
Several areas in the southern half of Portugal, including Lisbon, are under a red warning until Monday night, said the Portuguese Institute for Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA).
Two-thirds of Portugal was also on high alert Sunday for extreme heat and forest fires - as was the Italian island of Sicily, where firefighters tackled 15 blazes Saturday.
In Italy, 21 cities were on high alert for extreme heat, including Milan, Naples, Venice, Florence and Rome.
'We were supposed to be visiting the Colosseum, but my mum nearly fainted,' said British tourist Anna Becker, who had travelled to Rome from a 'muggy, miserable' Verona.
Hospital emergency departments across Italy have reported an uptick in heatstroke cases, according to Mario Guarino, vice president of the Italian Society of Emergency Medicine.
'We've seen around a 10 percent increase, mainly in cities that not only have very high temperatures but also a higher humidity rate. It is mainly elderly people, cancer patients or homeless people, presenting with dehydration, heat stroke, fatigue,' he said.
In Venice, authorities offered free guided tours for people over 75s in air-conditioned museums and public buildings. Meanwhile, temperatures are set to soar to 34C in the UK on Monday.
Britain bathed in balmy 30C heat on Sunday to round off a sweltering weekend and there is set to be no relief overnight, with temperatures in England and Northern Ireland remaining in the late teens.
And things will get even toastier at the start of next week with the mercury reaching 26C in the southeast by 10am on Monday before hitting highs in the mid 30s by the afternoon.
A weather map shows that London and the southeast will experience the highest figures, with 31C expected in the Midlands and 28C in the northwest and west of the country.
The Met Office wrote on X: 'Here is the 4cast for Monday. Hot across southeast England in particular with temperatures reaching 34 Celsius.'
The toasty temperatures will threaten the UK's June record of 35.6C - set in the famously hot summer of 1976.
It comes after fires devastated towns in Greece, where some regions have had to declare a state of emergency.
On Thursday, a violent forest fire devastated several seaside towns east of Athens, damaging homes and prompting dozens of evacuations in a popular destination for Greek and foreign tourists.
The fire broke around 12.30pm local time (9.30am UK time) near the towns of Palaia Fokaia and Thymari, around 30 miles east of Athens, and forced the evacuation of five villages, according to Greek firefighters.
It comes on the heels of another fire on the island of Chios - Greece's fifth-largest island - which as of Wednesday had destroyed more than 10,000 acres of land in four days.
Temperatures reached up to 40 degrees Celsius in the Athens region on Thursday, with forecasts indicating that the heatwave could continue until Saturday.
In the previous 24 hours, 45 fires had broken out in Greece, firefighters said.
Earlier this week, hundreds of firefighters backed up by aircraft were battling a wildfire burning out of control for the three days on the Greek island of Chios.
Towering walls of flames tore through forest and agricultural land on the island as reinforcements were hurried in from Athens, Thessaloniki and the nearby island of Lesbos.
By Tuesday morning, the fire department said 444 firefighters with 85 vehicles were tackling the blaze on scattered fronts.
Eleven helicopters and two water-dropping planes were providing air support.
Emergency services issued evacuation orders for villages and settlements in the area, when fires broke out near the island's main town.
Apocalyptic scenes captured in images and videos showed firefighters battling the flames as the wildfires raged on, while thick plumes of black smoke filled the sky.
Other footage showed helicopters spraying water over smoke-filled fields.
The fire department has sent an arson investigation team to Chios to examine the cause of the blaze.
'We are faced with simultaneous fires in multiple, geographically unconnected parts of the island - a pattern that cannot be considered coincidental,' Climate Crisis and Civil Protection Minister Giannis Kefalogiannis said Monday from Chios.
Authorities, he said, were 'very seriously examining the possibility of an organized criminal act, in other words arson.'
The minister said police forces on the island had been reinforced, while military patrols had been doubled.
'Whoever thinks that they can play with the lives of citizens and cause chaos with premeditated actions will be led to court,' Kefalogiannis said.
'Arson is a serious crime and will be dealt with as such.'

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Reuters
24 minutes ago
- Reuters
As Europe sizzles, South America shivers under cold snap
BUENOS AIRES, July 1 (Reuters) - As Europe and North America swelter through heat waves, people in South America are contending with equally extreme weather at the other end of the spectrum: a sudden cold snap. In Buenos Aires on Tuesday, locals wrapped up in scarves, puffer jackets and wooly hats, and they sipped hot drinks as frost coated cars in the early morning. Temperatures in the city dropped below zero, a rarity even in the Southern Hemisphere's winter which is currently under way and runs opposite to the Northern Hemisphere's seasons. "I literally almost froze," said Juan Manuel Amnini, a 42-year-old engineer in Buenos Aires who wore a gray wool hat and a face covering against the cold. "You cover up with whatever you have. Under this, I'm wearing layers and layers of clothes like I'm an onion." In Europe meanwhile, Italy banned outdoor work in some areas, while France shut schools and part of the Eiffel Tower. Spain confirmed its hottest June on record as a severe heat wave gripped Europe, triggering widespread health alerts. In Barcelona, authorities were looking into whether the death of a street sweeper over the weekend was heat-related. High temperatures in the northern and middle swath of the United States have been consistent since late June. Heat warnings have been issued across large areas, part of a pattern linked to climate change with high temperatures arriving earlier and lasting longer. Asphalt and concrete in cities intensify the impact by absorbing and radiating heat. In Argentina - as well as neighboring Chile and Uruguay - the cold snap led to unexpected snowfall in some areas, with chill winds from the Antarctic to the south. Many homes and offices were not built for these conditions, residents said. "Right now I have a thermal underneath my clothes, a pair of trousers, and another pair of trousers on top of those," said Gael Larrosa, a student in Buenos Aires. "I have a really hard time with the cold. Here the cold kills you, it really kills you."


The Independent
an hour ago
- The Independent
Mediterranean Sea hits record 30C as marine heatwave puts species at risk
Mediterranean Sea temperatures surged in a marine heatwave during June, putting some species under threat as Europe swelters under record-setting and deadly hot weather. The European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service said sea surface temperatures on 22 June were more than five degrees Celsius above the seasonal average. Waters off Spain hit a record 30C on Tuesday, according to Spanish forecaster AEMET. It comes after the summit of Mont Blanc, western Europe's highest mountain, remained above freezing for a whole day for the first time in history – another terrifying hint at the pace of climate change. Italy limited outdoor work, France closed schools and Turkey battled wildfires on Tuesday in a heatwave that meteorologists said was 'exceptional' for arriving so early in summer. Spain confirmed its hottest June on record, while temperatures passed 40 degrees Celsius (104F) in some of its cities on Tuesday. Europe is known to be heating up at twice the global average speed and is the world's fastest-warming continent, according to Copernicus. 'What is exceptional ... but not unprecedented is the time of year,' said World Meteorological Organization spokesperson Clare Nullis. Europe is experiencing extreme heat 'which normally we would see later on in the summer,' she said. Some countries issued health alerts and trade unions attributed the death of a construction worker near Bologna on Monday to the heat. Outdoor work was banned in some Italian regions during the hottest hours of the day as Italy issued heatwave red alerts for 17 cities, including Milan and Rome. Power outages, likely caused or aggravated by spiking electricity consumption from air conditioners, were reported in central Florence and in the northern city of Bergamo. In Sicily, a woman with a heart condition reportedly died while walking in Bagheria, news agencies reported. In Barcelona, authorities were looking into whether the death of a street sweeper at the weekend was heat-related. The Red Cross set up an air-conditioned "climate refuge" for residents in Malaga. Extreme heat can kill by causing heat stroke, or aggravating cardiovascular and respiratory diseases, with older people being among the most vulnerable. Turkey continued to battle the wildfires that forced the temporary evacuation of around 50,000 residents in areas surrounding Izmir earlier this week. In France, nearly 1,900 schools were closed. In Spain, the average temperature was 23.6C last month. Copernicus said June probably ranks among the five warmest in the country's history. England had its hottest June since at least 1884, the Met Office said. A Paris-Milan rail service was disrupted because of a mudslide on the French side of the Alps, with full service not expected to be fully restored until mid-July. The top floor of the Eiffel Tower was closed, disappointing scores of visitors. 'I tried to get all organised before our departure and the result is nonsense,' said Laia Pons, 42, a teacher from Barcelona who booked Eiffel tickets for her family three years ago. The scorching temperatures have raised the risk of field fires as farmers in France, the European Union's biggest grain producer, start harvesting this year's crop, with many working through the night to avoid peak afternoon temperatures. In the Mediterranean, the most intense warming during June's 'marine heatwave' was in the western area including the Balearic Sea, off Spain, and the Tyrrhenian Sea, off western Italy. 'We have seen temperatures we were expecting in the middle of August being recorded in June and ... this is why it is considered a record year for temperatures in the Mediterranean Sea,' Christos Spyrou, associate researcher at the Academy of Athens research centre for atmospheric physics, said. He said that the average sea temperatures in June were 3-6 degrees higher than the average between 1982-2023, which was used as a reference period. 'We expected these sea temperatures in August,' Spyrou said. 'Some species will not be able to reproduce or survive in these conditions, especially in increasing temperatures.'


Daily Mail
2 hours ago
- Daily Mail
EXCLUSIVE I'm a dog trainer - here's how to entertain your pet when it's too hot to go for a walk
A professional dog trainer has revealed her top tips for pet safety during a heatwave - especially when it's too hot to go for a walk. Pip Tomson from North Oxfordshire, who runs Paws With Pip, says there's a 'misconception' that dogs need to be walked every day. As temperatures in the UK soar above 30 degrees this week, it's actually safer to keep to training exercises inside. While walking your dog 'really early' in the morning or as late as possible in the evening is better during a heatwave, Pip emphasises that dogs will be just as satisfied with 'mental stimulation' indoors. Pip, who trained with Victoria Sitwell Academy, told MailOnline: 'The first thing I would say is, do not walk your dog during the day. It's just too hot. 'I think there's a little bit of a misconception that you've got to exercise your dog every single day without fail. 'When it's weather like we're having - you don't need to do that at all. But there's other things you can do that will be stimulating for your dog, alongside physical exercise.' In one video, the certified professional shared a mat trick to help her dog Bindy to settle - saying that, once perfected, it helps them to keep calm when the doorbell rings, when the postman comes - and can even be taken to a coffee shop. In the clip, Pip encouraged Bindy onto the mat with treats, eventually hoping for her to lie down of her own accord. She showed how to perfect it, saying: 'All I do, is I reward her for getting onto the mat.' Afterwards, she decided to 'reset' her, throwing a treat away from the mat, to start again. When she came back, she gave her another treat. 'Notice how I waited for all four paws on the mat. You don't have two - in the early stages you can wait for your dog to just put two paws on the mat. That's amazing. We do all this in small steps.' Eventually, Bindy began to come to the mat of her own accord. Pip, 47, said: 'Now this is really good for her. It helps keep her calm and it's also great when we go to the vets because she can get really uncomfortable. 'If she's used to her little mat, where lovely things happen on it, like treats, then that makes the whole experience so much easier.' As temperatures in the UK soar above 30 degrees this week, it's actually safer to keep to training exercises inside Pip says most dogs work really well with food as a motivator - and it can be balanced out with reducing their kibble at dinner time Pip's tips for how to look after your pet in the heatwave 1. Don't take your pet running or cycling. 2. Only walk your pet very early in the morning or late at night. 3. Don't leave your dog in car, not even with windows open - unless the air con is on 4. Make sure they have access to water and a bowl at all times - put them in several rooms of your house. You can also add ice cubes. 5. You can use pet-safe sunscreens if your dog is prone to sunburn 6. Use cool damp towels or an ice pack wrapped in a towel. 7. If your dog does like water, you can use paddling pools and water sprinklers. 8. Check the weather forecast and make sure they have access to shade 9. Focus on training exercises instead of physical activity. 10. Carefully monitor your pet for all signs of heatstroke. Other exercises can also come in handy, such as food puzzles or even stuffing a toy Kong - or hiding treats round the house. This will keep them occupied inside and you can even add cool treats from the fridge, such as doggy ice cream. Pip says most dogs work really well with food as a motivator and it can be balanced out by giving them a bit less of their kibble, or whatever food it might be, at dinnertime. For those that are less food-motivated, Pip recommends a squeaky toy, or trying out a food platter with different types of treats to see what they're likely to respond too. And the exercises don't need to take a long time - for a puppy, it only needs to be a few minutes, while older dogs can have up to 10 minutes training at a time. In the hot weather, Pip says you can even ask your dog walker to try out the training exercises during a home visit, instead of taking them out in the heat. When your pet does go outside, for example in the garden, Pip says you should add pet-safe sunscreen to any white patches, and make sure there's easy access to water. In the hot weather, dogs will also respond well to paddling pools and sprinklers - but it's still important to be mindful of how easily they can overheat. Pip said: 'They cannot regulate their own body temperature. They don't sweat like us. They sweat a little bit through the pads on their paws, but they don't sweat like we do.' Dogs with flat faces, such as the popular French Bulldogs and Boxer breeds, are especially vulnerable to heatstroke. You should contact your vet immediately if you notice your dog heavily panting, drooling a lot, being sick or acting very lethargic - all of which can signify heatstroke. She says that dogs suffer a lot more in the high temperatures than humans do, and aren't used to it being so hot Pip says: 'We're their caregivers, so we've got a huge responsibility to return their unconditional love by looking after them properly. 'In the UK, dogs are not used to living in exceedingly hot temperatures. They're used to a cooler climate. 'It's about having really good brain health as well, improving communication with your dog and building a better bond with them.' And it may sound simple - but it's always important to check the weather forecast before heading out for the day, and make sure your pooch will have access to the shade. Pip is also sharing her dog training adventures on Instagram on her account @paws_withpip