ENVIRONMENT
CLIMATE
Spain gripped by 'extreme' heat wave, expected
soon in France
Spain was on Monday already in the grips of a heat
wave expected to reach "extreme" levels on Monday, as France is
braced for one also. Meteorologists blame the unusually high seasonal
temperatures on global warming.
Le Monde
with AFP
Published
on June 13, 2022 at 18h18
The
"unusual" temperatures for the time of year follow the hottest May in
at least 100 years in Spain, Ruben del Campo, spokesman for the Spanish
Meteorological Agency (Aemet) said.
He told
Agence France Presse (AFP) that the current heat wave would bring "extreme
temperatures" and "could last until the end of the week".
The mercury
will rise above 40 degrees Celsius (around 104 degrees Fahrenheit) in the day
in many Spanish towns and remain high at night, above 20 to 22 degrees, he
said.
The heat
wave is also set to hit other parts of Europe, such as France, in the next few
days, Mr. del Campo warned.
France's
weather service said the heat wave would hit southern regions from Tuesday
night, worsening a drought across much of the country that is threatening farm
harvests.
From
Wednesday, much of France will be sweltering in temperatures that could reach
38 or even 40 degrees C – "extremely early" for the season –
forecaster Frederic Nathan of Meteo-France told AFP.
Water use
restrictions are already in place in 35 departments – around a third of the
country – and utilities are urging farmers, factories and public service
providers to show "restraint" to avoid further depletions of water
tables.
'Not normal'
Spain has
experienced four episodes of extreme temperatures in the last 10 months.
A heat wave
last August set a new record, with the temperature hitting 47.4 degrees C in
the southern city of Montoro.
"This
extreme heat is not normal at this time during the spring," Mr. del Campo
said, attributing it to global warming.
Temperatures
were also "exceptionally high" between Christmas and New Year's Day.
According
to Aemet forecasts, temperatures could reach 43 degrees C in the southern
region of Andalusia, especially the cities of Cordoba or Seville, in the next
few days.
Since the
pre-industrial era, Spain has seen temperatures rise by 1.7 degrees C on
average, Mr. del Campo said.
Not only
have temperatures become more extreme, he said, but periods of heat have become
more frequent.
Summers in
Spain, he added, "are a bit hotter every year and getting longer and
longer. A summer lasts one month longer than in the 1980s."
Apart from
the consequences on human health, he warned of the environmental impact, with a
high risk of drought and water supply problems, and more fires.
Recent
science has shown beyond any doubt that climate change has already increased
the frequency and intensity of heat waves, and that worse is on the horizon no
matter how quickly humanity draws down carbon pollution.
Earth has
already warmed 1.1 degrees C since pre-industrial times.
The decade
from 2011 to 2020 was the warmest on record, and the last six years the hottest
ever registered.

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