Why
Europe Is the Fastest-Warming Continent
The
burning of fossil fuels is raising temperatures worldwide, but local factors,
on land and at sea, determine which regions warm most rapidly.
Raymond
Zhong
By
Raymond Zhong
Reporting
from London
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/06/24/climate/europe-fastest-warming-continent.html
June 24,
2026, 1:49 p.m. ET
Western
Europe’s second record-shattering heat wave in a month aligns with a grim
trend: For the past three decades, Europe has been warming faster than any
other continent.
Average
temperatures there have climbed by roughly 1 degree Fahrenheit, or 0.56 degrees
Celsius, per decade since the mid-1990s, more than double the pace of warming
worldwide, according to Copernicus, the European Union’s climate monitoring
service.
Emissions
of carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases from human activity are driving
the planet’s long-term increase in temperatures, which is helping hot spells
reach ever-greater extremes of severity and duration.
But local
factors determine how all that excess heat is distributed around the world, and
why temperatures are rising faster in some places than others.
In
Europe’s far-northern reaches, for instance, the warmer atmosphere is melting
the sea ice that once covered huge swaths of the Arctic. That leaves more of
the ocean’s bare, dark surface to absorb the sun’s energy, exacerbating warming
in and around the top of the globe.
Pollution
controls are another factor behind how quickly Europe has heated up. Curbs on
industrial emissions have been good for Europeans’ lungs but have also left
fewer particles in the air called aerosols that can bounce solar radiation back
into space.
There’s
also less snow on the ground to deflect the sun’s energy. Last year, the amount
of ground covered by snow in Europe was, at its annual peak, about a third
below average, according to Copernicus. The result is more exposed soil that
can take up heat, especially in Scandinavia and the European part of Russia.
More on
the European Heat Wave
More than
a dozen countries have issued urgent heat warnings. Track the heat. Read about
lessons from past deadly heat waves and how students are faring.
These
changes on land and at sea are also modifying the way air moves above Europe,
in ways that could be making searing heat waves like the one this week more
frequent.
The
temperature difference between the hot Equator and the cold North Pole is a
major driver of weather throughout the Northern Hemisphere. But when there’s
less snow on the ground in Europe each spring and less ice offshore, that
temperature gap shrinks. This might be redirecting the jet stream, or the belt
of strong westerly winds that steers the weather, in ways that produce
prolonged summer heat waves on the continent, scientists showed in a 2020
study.
In recent
decades, the jet stream has also been splitting more often into two branches
over Europe, creating an area of weak winds where heat can become trapped for
days, scientists have found.
Normally,
the jet stream keeps cool maritime air blowing into Europe from the Atlantic.
But when the jet splits, the high-pressure air in between the two branches
reroutes this normal movement of weather fronts. That can transform what might
otherwise be just a few sweltering summer days into a weekslong heat wave, with
deadly consequences.
In a 2022
study, researchers found that almost all of the recent increase in the
frequency and intensity of heat waves in Western Europe was linked to these
“double jet” patterns sticking around for longer stretches. Whether
human-caused changes in the climate are making double jets more persistent or
frequent is still uncertain, though.
In the
2003 heat wave that killed as many as 70,000 people across Europe, the double
jet lingered for 29 days. Even if this week’s heat doesn’t prove as
long-lasting, it is already rewriting the record books, not by modest
increments but by big jumps.
Scientists
have begun analyzing this week’s temperatures in France, Britain and other
places to estimate how much more likely a heat wave of this magnitude has
become as a result of human-caused warming.
“We
expect increasing temperatures and the breaking of temperature records due to
climate change,” said Lizzie Kendon, a climate scientist at the University of
Bristol in England. What’s been “extraordinary” so far this week, she said, are
the margins by which previous records are being surpassed. And several more
days of searing heat are still to come.
.
Raymond
Zhong reports on climate and environmental issues for The Times.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário