EU France records its hottest day ever as Europe withers in early heat wave - Laugh at Europoors for not having air conditioning in the year 2026

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France records its hottest day ever as Europe withers in early heat wave Archive | Article

By SAMUEL PETREQUIN Updated 6:04 PM CDT, June 23, 2026

PARIS (AP) — France recorded its hottest day ever Tuesday as an early heat wave gripped Europe, prompting the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre museum to restrict visiting hours and disrupting school and transportation schedules in multiple countries.

Punishing temperatures extended to the United Kingdom and Spain, where weather agencies issued red alerts — like France — about the risks of extreme heat for tens of millions of people.

The record of 29.8 C (85.6 F) for France’s national thermal indicator — an average of temperatures measured at 30 weather stations — was only the latest in a series of never-before-registered highs heaped on Europe’s largest country. The conditions were likely to persist at least until the weekend.

“Further record-breaking temperatures are expected, including some that could surpass all previous records, regardless of the time of year,” the Meteo France weather service said.


France’s previous hottest days were recorded during heat waves of August 2003 and July 2019, with an average temperature of 29.4 C (84.9 F).

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Tourists use umbrellas to shelter from the sun as they visit the historical Spanish steps in Rome, Tuesday, June 23, 2026

Temperature records also tumbled at individual weather stations and on consecutive days in some towns as daytime highs climbed well above 40 C (104 F), Meteo France said.

In the French capital, Gin Dujardin said the heat forced him to halt his work fixing roofs, which in Paris often have galvanized zinc coverings.

“It’s very, very hard because the zinc is very hot. The welds don’t hold,” he said. “It’s Dubai temperatures. It’s impossible.”

France has recorded 40 fatalities from drowning in the past week as people seek relief in rivers and other bodies of water, despite authorities’ warnings about unsupervised swimming. Most of the drownings involved young people, Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu said.

Meteo France said the heat wave has reached what it described as a “plateau of severity,” with unrelenting heat, day and night. A growing number of regions will tip into the red again Wednesday as the heat spreads across more than half of the country, including the northernmost tip of France, the weather service said.

Human-caused climate change is tied to increasingly extreme weather, and U.N. climate agency projections say the next five years are likely to shatter more heat records.

The Louvre and the Eiffel Tower close early​

In a country without widespread air conditioning, schools, public transportation and sporting events have been affected. In Paris, the Eiffel Tower closed in the afternoon instead of late at night, as it usually does. The Louvre museum said it would close two hours earlier than normal from Wednesday through Saturday.

“Although parts of its historic building are naturally resilient, the museum remains vulnerable and is not sufficiently adapted to climate change,” Louvre officials said. “Heat buildup is greatest toward the end of the day and is further intensified by high visitor numbers.”

This heat wave, coming early in the summer, has already been compared to the August 2003 heat wave that roasted France with the highest temperatures in over half a century. It caused an estimated 15,000 deaths, many of them among older people in apartments and retirement homes without air conditioning.


Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent, with temperatures increasing twice as fast as the global average since the 1980s, according to the European Union’s Copernicus Climate Change Service. Over the last four years, more than 200,000 people across Europe died from heat-related causes, and most of those deaths were preventable, the World Health Organization’s Europe office said this month.

The above-average temperatures can cause heat exhaustion and life-threatening heat stroke.

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A drugstore sign shows the temperature 43 degrees Celsius (109,4 degrees Fahrenheit) in Rennes, western France, Monday, June 22, 2026.

Rail systems are strained by high temperatures​

Hundreds of British schools planned to close or close early this week because of the heat, while many train services were reduced to avoid heat-related problems on the rail lines.
The Met Office, the U.K. weather agency, issued a heat warning for Wednesday and Thursday, with forecasts suggesting June’s all-time daily temperature record could be broken.

Temperatures of around 37 degrees C (98.6 F) are expected in southern England, with up to 35 C (95 F) in southeast Wales. The peak of the heat wave is now forecast for Wednesday and Thursday, when highs could reach 39 C (102.2 F) in London or southern England.


Conditions are expected to ease by Friday, the Met Office said.

On Tuesday, multiple U.K. train operators, including the express train serving London Gatwick Airport, said they were canceling or reducing services. Railway operators urged people to travel only if “absolutely necessary” on Wednesday and Thursday.

Heat waves could become more frequent and longer​

Further south, Spain faced a heat wave across parts of the Iberian Peninsula.

Spain’s national weather service, Aemet, issued red alerts Tuesday for temperatures of 44 C (111 F) in southern Andalusia as well as warnings of thermometers hitting 40 C (104 F) in the normally temperate Cantabria and the Basque Country regions along the country’s northern Atlantic coast.

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Aemet meteorologist Rubén del Campo said Spain, which has experienced increasingly torrid summers, is only going to get hotter because of climate change as heat waves become more frequent, longer and occur outside the traditional window of July and August.

Of the dozen heat waves Aemet has recorded in June since it started tracking them in 1975, half have occurred since 2015, del Campo said.

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Tourists wear hats to protect themselves from the sun as they admire one of the facades of the Sagrada Familia church in Barcelona, Spain, May 28, 2026

Human-driven climate change is heating up the atmosphere, both above Spain and in the surrounding sea waters, he said.

Copernicus, the EU weather monitoring agency, found that in Europe and globally, 2024 was the hottest year on record, and the continent experienced its second-highest number of “heat stress” days.


Scientists warn that climate change is exacerbating the frequency and intensity of heat and dryness, especially in southeastern Europe, making the region more vulnerable to health impacts and wildfires.

___

Associated Press journalists John Leicester in Paris, Sylvia Hui in London and Joseph Wilson in Barcelona, Spain, contributed to this report.
 
If shit is too bad, sleep in your car with air con
This won't work. After a while the engine will just overheat and the air con will freeze over. If the outdoor temp is in the 90 - 100+ F range, a car air conditioner will freeze over while the car is in motion and the only fix is to turn it off and let it defrost. And there's always the problem of running out of gas while you're sleeping.
 
No one is going to be able to convince me that there are Germans who don't open their windows.
 
It is 23C here now and it is the middle of winter.
And 6 degrees higher is a historical killer heat-wave in France?

WTF. 29C is not hot. You afraid your fucking igloo will melt or something?
The 29°c average is brought way down thanks to the Atlantic / Mediterrenean so along the coastlines, the average temperature is actually nice. Once you go ~50km inland, you immediately get temperatures in the 37-42°c range ( 98-107F )
 
Ostatnio edytowane:
rookie numbers
hell, lets drown *all* the Frogs
Meanwhile
Maricopa County (which includes Phoenix) records an average of several hundred heat-related fatalities each year. Specifically, the region registered 645 heat-related deaths in 2023, followed by 608 deaths in 2024, with direct heat stroke and heat-exposure conditions making up a significant portion of these fatalities. [1]
Just one city in one state in the USA. Has more heat-related fatalities each year, then most of Europe will every have.
 
As for the heat and tolerance to it - the human body needs time to adjust to heat. If you live somewhere hot all the time (and most of the USA is far south of Europe) your body adjusts. Fluid balance adjusts, but you need a bit of time to do that.
If most of your year is 5-20c like it is here and suddenly it’s 40, you’re going to suffer. Hot countries have infrastructure to cope - things like wraparound porches, shutters on windows, sash windows etc. Cold countries don’t have such things. Window units for AC or even portable don’t work well with our hinged windows, yanks have sliding windows, that you can easily shove a window unit in or a hose out of and seal it.
It’s just how your urban set up is. It’d be like living in Kiruna and calling Texans retards for whining about a few flakes of snow in the winter. Well yeah of course they think a single snowstorm is Armageddon, no one has winter tyres, it’s not set up for that kind of weather. Northern Europe is also humid in heat, outside of the swampy bits American heat is more dry. If you live in Kiruna you dig yourself of a few metres of snow out and pop the kids on a sledge to go to school in -40. Your babies sleep outdoors at kindergarten nicely wrapped up in their blankets at temperatures that would kill a Texan.
It’s just what you’re used to.
the usa has people living in the same type of climate as france, no? are they a bunch of pussy faggots? no.

are there any real people left out there? the eu is full of muzzies or wallie background actors.
 
the europoor is so broken that even their physical bodies can't handle an average summer afternoon in the greatest nation on earth. genuinely, I'd just kill myself if I was french right now. every day I thank God for making me an American.
 
If you live somewhere hot all the time (and most of the USA is far south of Europe) your body adjusts.
Except it isn't hot all the time in the USA. Even the parts that are on the same latitude as Europe have 40-40 or 30-30 weather, where you hit the first number in F in winter and the second number in C in summer. You'll have snow in NYC in winter and then a wet, humid summer worse than anything in the UK thanks to a combination of the hot deep ocean currents from the equator and the Appalachians trapping moisture.
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Chicago in the interior is even worse since the Great Lakes aren't nearly as much of a heat bank as the Atlantic Ocean.
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ITT a bunch of mutts who don't understand why people used to a particular temperature range are uncomfortable when they're outside it
To be fair, summer heat deaths in Europe has been a thing for a while. About thirty years ago, Chicago went through a really nasty heat wave that ended up killing several hundred oldsters when the power got knocked out, and even as fucked up as Chicago is, it was still considered to be an unusual event.

It's one of the reasons that us Burgers have been amused by all the Euros celebrating our near-ubiquitous A/C while they're here for the World Cup.

The weather stations they use for these highs are all junk status, with uncertainties of more than 5 degrees C, and are located in the middle of urban centres or other microclimates that are prone to read higher temperatures than the surroundings due to heat island effects.
This is one of the most insidious tricks of the climate scam, in putting these temperature gauges smack in the middle of concrete and asphalt urban heat sinks. It doesn't help that urbanization has taken over a lot of former open space in the western world due to the UN's Replacement Migration agenda.
 
is air con illegal in the euro zone or something?

No it isn't but energy prices are pretty high and a machine will cost from 400 to 4000 USD. The real problem is unless you live in a relatively free country you wouldn't be able to ge AC because your historical building can't be modified without state permission. So you'll get a shitty indoor unit.
Also getting a western Eurotard to pay hard cash for comfort is nearly impossible. They are all tight fisted for things like that.

I was a little surprised to learn how rare AC in this day and age in supposedly advanced Western Europe since it can get pretty uncomfortable on the regular. Particularly in France I've heard it claimed that AC is in part culturally avoided due to its association with America.
 
The most northerly states of the contiguous US are on roughly the same parallel as central and southern France, and due to their location within a large continental landmass will often experience higher spring and summer temperatures for longer periods than western europe, where the climate is heavily moderated by the atlantic. Again and again, you Americans seem not to grasp that you're far further south than we are and have a much different climate than we do. AC isn't common here because it's not normally needed. America uses AC everywhere because it is commonly needed.
The north of America doesn’t have the Gulf Stream warming it and the Great Lakes have lake effects you stupid motherfucker. This is Americology 101.
 
Amerifags do not know how to build properly, which is why you live in literal card(board) houses. You also do not know how to drive and maintain your cars, which is why you have a speed limit and we have none.
LOL, Americans mostly live in the same housing stock that was built from the 1950s-1980s, while the speed limit is decades old and has jack shit to do with the ability to maintain our vehicles, you retarded monkey nigger.

Meanwhile

Just one city in one state in the USA. Has more heat-related fatalities each year, then most of Europe will every have.
Phoenix regularly gets up to 105-120 in the summer and it's been a retiree destination since the end of World War II, so when the electricity goes out, or homeless drug addicts pass out on Van Buren in the middle of July, they tend to fucking croak. What the fuck is your excuse?
 
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