News Flash
MADRID, Aug 24, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - A 16-day heatwave Spain suffered this month
was "the most intense on record", the country's State Meteorological Agency
(AEMET) said on Sunday.
Provisional readings for the August 3-18 heatwave exceeded the last record,
set in July 2022, and showed an average temperature 4.6C higher than for
previous such phenomena, the agency said on X.
The August heatwave exacerbated tinderbox conditions in Spain that fuelled
wildfires that continue to ravage parts of the north and west of the country.
More than 1,100 deaths in Spain have been linked to the heatwave, according
to an estimate released Tuesday by the Carlos III Health Institute.
Since it began its records in 1975, AEMET has registered 77 heatwaves in
Spain, with six of them going 4C or more above the average -- five of those
since 2019.
Scientists say climate change is driving longer, more intense and more
frequent heatwaves worldwide.
AEMET said a 10-day period within the last heatwave, covering August 8 and
17, was the hottest 10 consecutive days recorded in Spain "since, at least,
1950".
The agency said that it is "a scientific fact that current summers are hotter
than in previous decades".
It added: "Each summer is not always going to be hotter than the previous
one, but there is a clear trend towards much more extreme summers. What is
key is adapting to, and mitigating, climate change."