Monday, 24 June 2019

After turbulent storms, floods, giant hailstone showers and lightning, sometimes all during the same day Europe is set to suffer a deadly heatwave

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Intense heat is forecast across much of Continental Europe over the coming days.
Temperatures are expected to peak at close to 40°C on Thursday in Paris.
And it is unclear how long this heat wave will last.
June is typically a month of gentle warmth in Europe, marking the beginning of summer.
However, this year's June has been anything but gentle.
There have been turbulent storms, floods, giant hailstone showers and lightning - and sometimes all during the same day.
And now the thermometer is set to dramatically shoot up with an abnormally early heatwave forecast for next week.
This unexpected heatwave has been caused by "a storm stalling over the Atlantic Ocean and high pressure over central and eastern Europe", according to international weather site AccuWeather. These conditions will bring very hot air from Africa northwards across Europe.
Accuweather says this will set the stage for "a potentially dangerous heatwave to occur over a large portion of western and central Europe".
Cities including Madrid, Paris, Belgium, Frankfurt and Berlin can expect a persistent heatwave, with daily temperatures near or above 32°C for at least the next six days.
Nights are not expected to be much cooler.
Temperatures could approach - or even exceed - 38°C in the hottest locations on Wednesday and Thursday.
Spain's meteorological agency Aemet issued a "yellow alert" for severe weather on Sunday, and says it expects to see a "hotter than usual" summer like last year.
In Germany, forecasters are predicting temperatures of up to 37°C on Tuesday and 38°C on Wednesday, with similar heat, also expected in Belgium and Switzerland.
French national forecaster Meteo-France warned that the heatwave will begin tomorrow, particularly in the east, with temperatures of up to 35°C or even 40°C across much of the country.
"This heatwave could be remarkable for how early it has come as well as its intensity," said Meteo-France.
The one region of France that will escape the stultifying heat is Brittany in the west.
France's health minister, Agnes Buzyn, warned local authorities, hospitals and retirement homes to be on high alert, noting that last summer's heatwave resulted in 1,500 more deaths than normal in July and August.
The mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, activated a level-three heatwave action plan on Sunday for the more extreme days.
This is particularly severe given that there are just four levels and level four has never been used.
The prefect tweeted that it had decided to launch the departmental heat wave management plan level orange (three) in Paris on Sunday that had been developed with the mayor.
This plan provides for the establishment of a network of "cool places".
And the city has identified 922 such public locations, with 218 of those accessible at night, including gardens, parks, cemeteries, swimming pools, churches and museums.
The most severe recent heatwave in France was in 2003.
It was described as the worst heatwave in Europe since 1540 by meteorologists.
There were almost 15,000 heat-related deaths in France during the months of July and August that year, according to the country's National Institute of Health.
During it, Paris hit its current record high of 40.4°C.
However, temperatures in the French capital are set to soar to very close to that record this coming week.
"We are expecting a heatwave that will affect more than half of France, of maximum intensity: the hottest day reached will be comparable to 2003, not very far away in any case," said meteorologist François Gourand at the Meteo-France press conference.
"This heatwave promises to be unprecedented for a month of June," continued Gourand.
He also said that temperature records for France in June look set to be broken.
The highest temperature ever recorded in France so far was 44.1C on August 12, 2003, in the region of Gard in the south of France.
Temperatures at the "Maison du grand Wobble," (House of The Big Wobble) is expected to peak at 35 deg C, (95 deg F) on Tuesday, see pic below...

"Maison du grand Wobble," lunchtime Monday the 24th

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