Is
Climate Change Fueling Europe’s Heat Wave? Yes, Researchers Say.
A
scientific analysis concluded that such high temperatures, across so much of
the continent, would “not have been possible” without global warming.
Raymond
Zhong
By
Raymond Zhong
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/26/climate/europe-heat-wave-climate-change.html
June 26,
2026, 12:01 a.m. ET
Human-caused
climate change made this month’s roasting heat in Western Europe much more
likely than it would have been even just two decades ago, scientists said
Friday, highlighting the rapidly escalating risks to health and livelihoods
from the burning of fossil fuels.
Emissions
of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases have been raising temperatures
worldwide for more than a century. All the extra heat at Earth’s surface allows
summer weather patterns to deliver hotter days and more stifling nights than
they once did.
After
examining decades of temperature records, a team of scientists has concluded
that a hot spell as intense as this week’s, over such a large stretch of
Europe, was still rare for June in today’s climate, with a less than 1 percent
chance of appearing in any given year.
But it
would have been even rarer in the 2000s, when the world was roughly 1.1 degree
Fahrenheit cooler than it is now. And it would have been “virtually impossible”
half a century ago, when the planet was 2 degrees Fahrenheit cooler, the
researchers wrote in a report.
“This
event would not have been possible in June without climate change,” said the
report’s lead author, Theodore Keeping, a climate scientist at Imperial College
London. How frequent such heat waves become in the future depends, Dr. Keeping
said, on how much nations do to cut emissions.
The
report was prepared by scientists affiliated with World Weather Attribution, an
initiative that analyzes extreme weather events to understand how they were
influenced by human-caused global warming.
This
week’s heat wave, which has shattered temperature records from Spain to
Germany, is the result of a system of high pressure, parked over Europe, that
has been sweeping in hot air from North Africa. Such heat domes, as they’re
known, have been responsible for many summer hot spells in Western Europe.
“The
weather pattern itself is not particularly unusual, but the temperatures are,”
said Friederike Otto, the climate scientist who leads World Weather
Attribution. “Or at least they used to be, without human-induced climate
change.”
In their
analysis, the researchers used temperature records to estimate how the odds of
heat waves of different intensities had changed over the decades because of
global warming. Their results indicate that a European heat wave comparable in
likelihood to this week’s would have produced average daytime temperatures that
were about 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit cooler in the 2000s and 6.3 degrees
Fahrenheit cooler in 1976.
The
scientists’ report has not yet been published in a peer-reviewed journal.
The
researchers chose to compare this event to 1976 because Britain broiled that
year in another fierce bout of summer heat.
“Many
city parks caught fire, chocolates melted in shops and altar candles wilted,”
according to a Reuters report from that June. On a stranded London subway
train, passengers vomited and broke the windows, desperate for cool air. Some
fainted.
But the
1976 heat wave wasn’t as widespread over Europe as the one this week has been,
Dr. Otto said. It wasn’t as humid. And even the record highs that the mercury
reached in Britain that June have been exceeded this week, according to
provisional estimates from the country’s Met Office.
The
weather patterns behind this week’s heat wave may not have been caused by
climate change, but scientists are trying to figure out whether climate change
might be making them more common or persistent over Europe. They’re also trying
to better understand the complex processes in the atmosphere that churn such
patterns into being.
A better
understanding could someday allow forecasters to spot nascent heat waves much
earlier, helping them warn the public weeks in advance, said Dim Coumou, a
climate scientist at the Dutch university VU Amsterdam. “The earlier you know,
the better adaptation measures you can take,” Dr. Coumou said.
Raymond
Zhong reports on climate and environmental issues for The Times.


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