News Flash

PARIS, France, July 3, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - An area of Europe with 410 million
people -- more than two-thirds of the continent's population -- experienced
temperatures over 35oC at least once during a June 15-30 heatwave, according
to an AFP analysis.
By comparison, some 320 million people in Europe experienced such
temperatures during a record-setting heatwave between August 1 and 17, 2003.
AFP made the calculations using daily maximum temperature data from the
European Drought Observatory and population figures from the Joint Research
Centre.
Almost the entire population of mainland France and more than three-quarters
of the combined populations of Spain and Italy experienced temperatures
exceeding 35oC at some point during the June heatwave, which stretched from
the Iberian Peninsula to Ukraine, passing through the Balkans and Germany.
Temperatures exceeded 35oC in an area surrounding the Spanish city of Lleida,
Catalonia, for at least 16 consecutive days, according to an AFP analysis of
data from the European observatory.
More broadly, daily maximum temperatures rose above 35oC for nearly 50
million people across Europe on at least 10 occasions during the heatwave.
These included 18 million people in central and southern France, over 15
million in northeastern and southwestern Spain, and 12 million in northern
Italy, mainly in the Po Valley.
All-time temperature records were broken in Germany, Poland, Slovakia, the
Czech Republic, and Hungary, as well as June records in the United Kingdom
and Switzerland.
Average temperatures in France hit record highs, notably including the
hottest nights ever recorded in the country.