‘No
country is safe’: deadly Nordic heatwave supercharged by climate crisis,
scientists say
Historically
cool nations saw hospitals overheating and surge in drownings, wildfires and
toxic algal blooms
Damian
Carrington Environment editor
Thu 14
Aug 2025 06.00 BST
The
prolonged Nordic heatwave in July was supercharged by the climate crisis and
shows “no country is safe from climate change”, scientists say.
Norway,
Sweden and Finland have historically cool climates but were hit by soaring
temperatures, including a record run of 22 days above 30C (86C) in Finland.
Sweden endured 10 straight days of “tropical nights”, when temperatures did not
fall below 20C (68F).
Global
heating, caused by the burning of fossil fuels, made the heatwave at least 10
times more likely and 2C hotter, the scientists said. Some of the weather data
and climate models used in their analysis indicated the heatwave would have
been impossible without human-caused climate breakdown.
The heat
had widespread effects, with hospitals overheating and overcrowding and some
forced to cancel planned surgery. At least 60 people drowned as outdoor
swimming increased, while toxic algal blooms flourished in seas and lakes.
Hundreds
of wildfires burned in forests and people were reported fainting at
holiday-season events. In the last major heatwave in the region, in 2018, 750
people died early in Sweden alone, and scientists anticipate a similar toll
once the data is processed.
Wildlife
was also affected, especially the Scandinavian peninsula’s famous reindeer.
Some animals died in the heat and others entered towns seeking shade. Drivers
were warned that reindeer could seek to cool down in road tunnels.
Much of
the northern hemisphere has experienced heatwaves in recent weeks. This
includes the UK, Spain and Croatia, where wildfire destruction is almost double
the 20-year average, and the US, Japan and South Korea. Scientists are certain
that the climate crisis has intensified this extreme weather.
Prof
Friederike Otto, a climatologist at Imperial College London who leads the World
Weather Attribution (WWA) collaboration, which did the Nordic analysis, said:
“Even relatively cold Scandinavian countries are facing dangerous heatwaves
today with 1.3C of warming – no country is safe from climate change.
“Burning
oil, gas, and coal is killing people today. Fossil fuels are supercharging
extreme weather and to stop the climate from becoming more dangerous, we need
to stop burning them and shift to renewable energy.”
Heatwaves
such as the one in Scandinavia will become another five times more frequent by
2100 if global heating reaches 2.6C, which is the trajectory today.
Maja
Vahlberg, a Swedish expert at the Red Cross Red Crescent Climate Centre, said:
“This July reminded us that in the north, heat is not a distant threat but is
seeping into hospitals, care facilities and homes. Our infrastructure was not
built to withstand these extreme temperatures and our ageing population is
increasingly susceptible to dangerous heat.
“I
watched a reindeer stay in the same patch of shade for three days straight
without grazing, a quiet sign of the strain the heat was causing,” she said.
The rapid
WWA study on the role of human-caused global heating in the Nordic heatwave
compared the likelihood of the high temperatures in today’s hotter climate with
that in the cooler preindustrial period, focusing on the hottest two-week
period in each country.
It found
that even the relatively small 0.2C rise in global temperature since 2018 had
doubled the chance of such heatwaves, showing that every fraction of a degree
mattered, the scientists said. “Climate change is fundamentally reshaping the
world we live in,” said Dr Clair Barnes, at Imperial College London.
A
striking aspect of the heatwaves was the number of tropical nights. “At one
station in northern Sweden, we had 10 of these days at the end of July, which
is extraordinary,” said Prof Erik Kjellström, at the Swedish Meteorological
Institute.
Amalie
Skålevåg, at the Norwegian Meteorological Institute, said: “Hot nights can be
dangerous when the body does not get a chance to rest and recover after a hot
day, and this is particularly true for people with underlying health
conditions.”
The
effects of the heatwave on reindeer threaten the livelihoods of Indigenous Sámi
communities, which have herded them for more than 1,000 years. “Such
disruptions also threaten [the Sámi’s] health and their right to sustain a way
of life – this makes climate change a human rights issue,” said Vahlberg.
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