Two
children found dead in car in France as heatwave hits Europe
Number of
countries issue alerts with sustained and rising temperatures expected to
present danger to health
Jon
Henley Europe correspondent
Mon 22
Jun 2026 16.22 BST
Two
children aged four and two have been found dead in their family’s car in
south-eastern France, the local prosecutor said, as a large swathe of western
Europe suffers a ferocious heatwave forecast to shatter absolute temperature
records.
“The
causes of death are yet to be determined, but the heat is the leading line of
inquiry,” said Hélène Mourges, the prosecutor in the town of Carpentras, where
the temperature was expected to exceed 39C (102.2F) on Monday afternoon.
The
deaths follow those of three elderly people, aged between 80 and 95, who died near Bordeaux over the weekend as a result of health
problems caused by the extreme temperatures, an official said. Thirteen more
drowned in swimming accidents.
French
authorities on Monday placed half the country – 49 of the country’s 96 mainland
departments – on a level 1 danger-to-life warning, urging 35 million people to
exercise “absolute vigilance”, avoid strenuous exertion and stay out of direct
sun.
A further
six departments will be added to the red list on Tuesday, with 35 others
remaining on a level 2 orange alert. “Very high temperatures are setting in for
the long term across the country,” said the national weather service,
Météo-France.
It said
temperatures throughout western and central France were likely to exceed 40C
from Monday afternoon, hitting 43C in Bordeaux, 41C in Limoges, 40C in Toulouse
and Tours and 39C in Paris, and would continue rising until the end of the
week.
Night-time
lows are also likely to be far higher than normal until at least Friday,
Météo-France said, with the minimum temperatures of about 25C recorded in
several towns and cities overnight on Sunday already setting all-time records.
France’s
so-called national heat index, an average of the day and night-time highs
measured at 30 weather stations around the country, hit its highest level for
June on Monday, the forecaster said.
More than
1,300 schools were closed nationwide on Monday, while another 4,000 rescheduled
classes to allow pupils to leave early. One in 10 regional train services
around Paris were cancelled amid fears for rolling stock and tracks.
“Many
people are going to suffer, because bodies suffer from an accumulation of high
temperatures,” said Stéphanie Rist, France’s health minister, visiting a Paris
hospital on Monday. She urged people to check on elderly and vulnerable
neighbours.
“We’re
heading for, at the very least, several days of very, very hot weather. We
really don’t know when temperatures will start falling,” Rist later told French
television.
France
went ahead with its annual street music festival, the Fête de la Musique, on
Sunday, although some local authorities called it off altogether and others ran
only evening events. Alcohol restrictions were imposed in many areas.
Spain
declared its first official heatwave of the year from Sunday until Wednesday,
with temperatures forecast to reach 44C in some areas. A public screening in
Madrid of the national football team’s World Cup match against Saudi Arabia was
cancelled.
The state
weather service, Aemet, warned on Sunday of “extremely high” day and night
temperatures and issued a red alert for the northern Basque region where the
city of San Sebastián was forecast to hit 40C, more than double the seasonal
average.
“We are
seeing temperatures between 5 and 10 degrees above normal for this time of
year, and in some northern areas even more than 10 degrees above
average,” said Rubén del Campo, a spokesperson for the
meteorological agency.
In
Germany, organisers suspended the final of the Berlin Open tennis tournament
and cleared everyone out of the event location because of severe thunderstorms
as temperatures in the German capital topped 30C over the weekend.
Temperatures
in Belgium – already past 30C on Sunday – would be “the hottest ever recorded”,
said David Dehenauw, the head of forecasting at the IRM weather institute. Some
rush-hour trains were cancelled to limit the risk of breakdowns.
In the
UK, the Met Office national weather service has issued an “extreme heat”
warning for much of southern England and parts of Wales until Thursday,
predicting temperatures of up to 39C. The current record for a June day is
35.6C, set in 1976.
Italy on
Monday issued heatwave red alerts for 12 cities, including Milan, Turin, Venice, Bologna, Florence and
Rome.
Scientists
have said that as the Earth continues to warm, extreme heat events historically
confined to high summer will become more frequent, more intense and last
longer, as well as happening earlier and later in the year.
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