Climate
Change’s Toll in Europe This Summer: Thousands of Extra Deaths
Three
times as many people in cities and towns died from severe heat as would have
done in a world without human-caused warming, scientists said.
Raymond
Zhong
By
Raymond Zhong
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/17/climate/europe-heat-deaths-climate-change.html
Sept. 17,
2025, 12:01 a.m. ET
Severe
heat this summer killed three times as many people in European cities as would
have died had humans not warmed the planet by burning fossil fuels, scientists
said Wednesday.
The new
analysis was based on historical mortality trends, not actual death records,
which are not yet widely available. The researchers looked at 854 European
cities and towns, where they estimated that a total of 24,400 people died as a
result of this summer’s heat.
The
findings reflect a worrying pattern: Rising temperatures are increasing the
risks to human health more quickly than communities and societies can adapt.
Nearly
all heat-related deaths are preventable, said Malcolm Mistry, an assistant
professor of climate and geospatial modeling at the London School of Hygiene
and Tropical Medicine who contributed to the analysis. And governments in
Europe, the fastest-warming continent, have taken steps to protect their
citizens.
So the
fact that so many people still die each summer “shows that we are not able to
keep pace with global warming,” Dr. Mistry said.
Summer
after stifling summer, extreme heat is transforming Europe. Wildfires are
worsening. Cities are rethinking the way they’re built. Companies are
struggling to keep workers safe.
In 2022,
during what was at that point the continent’s hottest summer on record, more
than 61,000 people died from the heat, scientists have estimated. More than
half of those people wouldn’t have died if not for global warming caused by
greenhouse gas emissions, deforestation and other human activities, researchers
concluded.
The
scientists behind the new analysis, which hasn’t yet been published in a
peer-reviewed journal, said their aim was to provide “early estimates” of this
summer’s heat fatalities. They examined European cities and towns with more
than 50,000 residents and adequately long records of local deaths. In total,
these areas account for 30 percent of Europe’s population.
The
researchers first used climate models to estimate that these areas would have
been 4 degrees Fahrenheit, or 2.2 degrees Celsius, cooler on average from June
through August in a hypothetical world that hadn’t been altered by
planet-warming emissions.
2024
Brought the World to a Dangerous Warming Threshold. Now What?
Global
temperatures last year crept past a key goal, raising questions about how much
nations can stop the planet from heating up further.
Then, by
extrapolating from past mortality rates, the researchers estimated that only
around 8,000 people in these cities would have died from heat in those months
in that alternate, cooler world, instead of the 24,400 people who likely did so
in the real world.
Rome,
Athens and Bucharest, Romania, were the European capitals with the highest
number of heat-related deaths after adjusting for city population, the
researchers found. But when it comes to the share of deaths that can be
attributed to climate change, the highest ranked capitals were Stockholm,
Madrid and Bratislava, Slovakia.
Sweden’s
capital might seem like an unlikely holder of the top spot. “Before, we had
very few, if any heat-related deaths in Northern Europe,” said Garyfallos
Konstantinoudis, a climate scientist at Imperial College London who worked on
the new analysis.
From that
low base, however, global warming is now starting to lift summer temperatures
in northern countries into the range where they can harm human health, Dr.
Konstantinoudis said. Far fewer people still die of heat there than in Southern
Europe, but when they do, it is much more squarely the result of climate
change, he said.


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