As Europe
Warms, Scientists Ask: How Much Hotter Could Summers Get?
Records
are being broken for the second time in a month, leading scientists to probe
the upper limits of what the warming climate can dish out.
Raymond
Zhong
By
Raymond Zhong
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/23/climate/europe-heat-wave-climate-change.html
June 23,
2026
Millions
of people seeking refuge from the dangerous heat in France this week have found
little relief with the setting sun, as temperatures shatter both daytime and
nighttime records. Highs in Britain could reach triple digits on Wednesday and
Thursday, beating the country’s previous June temperature record of 96 degrees.
Heat warnings are in place from Spain to Germany.
Summer is
just getting started, but Western Europe is already sweating through its second
severe heat wave of the year. Greenhouse gases from burning fossil fuels are
raising temperatures across the globe, and Europe is warming faster than any
other continent, priming it for more extreme hot spells.
That’s
prompting scientists to confront an urgent question: How hot can a heat wave
actually get? Not in future decades, as global warming continues, but today.
Maybe even this summer.
“We do
know that heat waves are becoming more severe and more frequent, and they’re
lasting longer,” said Rebecca Emerton, a senior scientist at the European
Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts in Reading, England. What’s striking
now, Dr. Emerton said, is the big margins by which temperature records are
being broken.
In
Western Europe, heat records are being smashed this week for the second time in
a month. Tuesday was France’s hottest day ever recorded, the national weather
agency said, with the mercury climbing as high as 111.7 degrees Fahrenheit in
the country’s southwest.
During
the year’s first heat wave a month ago, temperatures exceeded Britain’s May
heat record by more than 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit. They also came close to
surpassing the country’s June record, Britain’s Met Office said.
And the
nights have offered scant comfort. During last month’s hot spell, Britain
experienced its first night on record in which the average low temperature was
above 68 degrees.
Europe is
warming faster than the rest of the world for a combination of reasons. Nations
have curbed air pollution, which has improved air quality but left fewer
particles called aerosols in the sky to deflect sunlight back into space. Snow
cover has declined, causing the land to absorb more solar radiation. And shifts
in the patterns of atmospheric circulation around Europe have contributed to
more frequent and intense summer heat waves.
By
definition, record-breaking temperatures should be rare. But, as humans warm
the planet, extreme heat is appearing much more often than would be the case if
the climate were stable, scientists have found. That has led researchers to try
to figure out where the upper limits of our human-heated climate may lie.
Scorchers
of such intensity might not occur every summer, but knowing how bad they can be
could help cities, hospitals and utility companies prepare for the worst.
Using
computer simulations, scientists have made “substantial progress” in
establishing what the most extreme extremes might plausibly look like in
different places, said Erich Fischer, a climate scientist at the Swiss
university ETH Zurich. What’s less clear, he said, is how long such
extraordinary heat could possibly persist, exposing people to sweltering
conditions day after day, week after week.
“Is there
a limit to that?” Dr. Fischer said. “That’s where actually I think we still
have relative limited understanding.”
In a
recently published study, Dr. Fischer and another climate scientist, Laura
Suarez-Gutierrez, showed that many of the most severe European heat waves in
their computer simulations occurred shortly after another heat wave in the same
summer. One reason is that a heat wave can set up the next one to be more
intense: After a first round of high temperatures dries up the land, more of
the sun’s energy in the next round goes toward heating up the air instead of
evaporating moisture in the soil.
Back-to-back
hot spells also leave less time for human bodies and communities to recover.
“We’re
preparing a bit more for that particular day that is 50 or 40-something
degrees” Celsius, which is upward of 122 Fahrenheit, said Dr. Suarez-Gutierrez,
an assistant professor of atmospheric dynamics at Wageningen University in the
Netherlands. “We’re not preparing, necessarily, for a month of 36 degrees”
Celsius, or 96.8 degrees Fahrenheit, she said.
“It
doesn’t look as extreme on paper, but I don’t think our resources right now are
prepared for that,” she said.
Raymond
Zhong reports on climate and environmental issues for The Times.


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