Record heat exposes brittle public systems
Europe was gripped by an extreme heatwave on June 27, 2026, with record temperatures reported across Germany, France, Denmark, the Czech Republic, Switzerland, Slovakia and the United Kingdom, while authorities warned of health risks, transport disruption, power strain, hospital pressure and other impacts as the hot weather moved east. The numbers are not subtle: 150 million people in Europe were experiencing temperatures above 35C, and the World Meteorological Organization warned the heatwave would have “major impacts” on health and ecosystems.
Germany recorded a new all-time high for the second day in a row, with provisional readings of 41.5C in Möckern-Drewitz in the eastern state of Saxony-Anhalt, according to Germany's Meteorological Service. That surpassed a preliminary record of 41.3C set a day earlier in Saarbrücken near the French border. The service issued extreme heat warnings for nearly all of Germany and said temperatures of 36C were expected across the country, with local highs of 42C possible.
In Berlin, police deployed two water cannons to spray mist onto people. Near Hamburg, the main traffic lane on a part of the A7 autobahn, one of Germany’s busiest motorways, was closed after the heat caused the asphalt to split, authorities said. In two places outside Berlin, the concrete of the A2 burst because of the high temperatures and the highway had to be closed. Deutsche Bahn said, “Germany’s transportation infrastructure is being severely affected by the record-breaking heat this weekend,” and advised against all nonessential train travel.
Infrastructure built for profit, not survival
The company also gave customers the option of cancelling long-distance travel bookings into early next week without charge, saying its infrastructure was under particular strain because of sun exposure and additional risk to signals, tracks and overhead wires stemming from thunderstorms and wildfires. The heatwave pushed temperatures up to 18C above their seasonal average, according to the Reuters climate monitor, driven by an omega block, in which hot air is trapped over regions for extended periods with cooler air on its fringes.
In Dormagen, dozens of residents of a nursing home were evacuated for medical care because of dangerous heat conditions in the building, where the local fire department said temperatures reached 35C. A resident at the home died overnight, though a city spokesperson said it was not yet clear whether the heat was the cause. Cultural landmarks had to close across Europe, farming suffered and some hospitals struggled to cope. Demand for electric fans rose sharply, and Asian air-conditioning manufacturers reported a European sales boom. Most of the housing stock in northern Europe is built to keep heat in rather than withstand it.
France saw multiple towns in the east record their highest-ever temperatures, with some above 40C, even as the worst of the heatwave began to pass in some regions. Paris and 36 other regions, stretching from the center to the east and northeast, remained in the extreme-heat red zone on Saturday, down from 72 regions under such warnings on Thursday. The Paris public hospital authority, AP-HP, said it activated its emergency response plan across all 38 hospitals to cope, after a second consecutive day of nearly 3,000 people sought care in public hospital emergency rooms, about a third more than normal. AP-HP said phone calls to its medical dispatch centers were up nearly 80% compared with the same period in 2025.
Hospitals, pride marches and the price of heat
The French prime minister’s office said that although the heatwave was moving on, pressure on the healthcare system would persist and hospital admissions would stay high for several days. Concerns that hospitals could be overwhelmed prompted the postponement of the Paris Pride march for LGBTQ+ rights on Saturday, and a three-day music festival was canceled. The temperatures this week were higher than those during the historic 2003 heatwave that was blamed for 15,000 heat-related deaths, many of them older people. AP-HP director Nicolas Revel said, “I think we’ll be situated, clearly, between 2025 and without necessarily reaching the catastrophic level of 2003. But we have to expect that there will still be many deaths.” During another exceptionally hot summer last year, more than 5,700 deaths were attributed to heat, according to France’s public health authority.
The AP said around 40 deaths in France had been reported over the past week, while another report said the number of drowning deaths in France had risen to at least 55 since the heatwave began, with an estimated two-thirds of them having been swimming in unsupervised areas. Authorities in the U.K. warned people to take extra care when swimming in unsupervised areas after the deaths of around 40 people in France over the past week. In the U.K., sweltering conditions were expected to gradually ease over the weekend, though an amber warning remained in place until Saturday night.
Friday was confirmed as the country’s hottest June day on record, with a provisional temperature of 37.3C recorded in eastern England, more than 1C hotter than the long-standing record for June heat set in the summer of 1976. On Saturday, police said the bodies of a 22-year-old man and a 15-year-old boy were recovered from a lake and a river, bringing the total number of U.K. heat-related fatalities that week to four. Another report said a teenager, two men and a woman died on Saturday after getting into difficulty swimming in open water, bringing the total number of drownings during the recent heatwave to six, and that at least 15 people died in water-related incidents during the May heatwave in the U.K.
The climate emergency meets the borderless market
In Italy’s capital, which remained under a red heat alert, tourists sought shade near buildings and dunked their heads under public fountains, while street vendors sold bottled water, hats and sun umbrellas. Isabella Dold, a tourist from Kempten, Germany, said, “Gelato, pasta, because it’s tradition, but also fresh fruit, and ice cold drinks, that’s the best for this temperature.” Italy’s health ministry said 18 cities, including Venice, Florence, Bologna and Milan, were on red alert because of the danger posed by the high temperatures, and another report said the red alert covered 18 Italian cities including Milan, Rome, Turin, Venice, Genoa, Florence and Bologna for Saturday and Sunday, with temperatures expected to climb as high as 39C in some areas. The start of the Milan pride march was delayed to avoid the worst of the heat.
The Ironman European championship long-distance triathlon in Frankfurt shortened the cycling and running courses because of the heat, organisers said. In Denmark, the Danish Meteorological Institute reported a record 37C in Ødum north of Aarhus, the warmest day since records there began in 1874, while another report said a provisional 37C was recorded in Odum near Aarhus, exceeding the previous all-time record of 36.4C set in 1976. In Switzerland, a record 38.8C was set in Basel, and another report said Basel reached 39C for the hottest-ever June day for the third day in a row. The Czech Republic recorded its hottest day on record, with 40.8C in Doksany north of Prague, and forecasters said it may still rise. Slovakia confirmed that Friday night was its warmest on record, with temperatures not dropping below 26.3C. The heatwave was also reported to be affecting Poland as it moved east.
An estimated 200 times more likely today than it would have been 20 years ago, the record-breaking heat and humidity in Europe this week would not have been possible without climate change, according to the World Weather Attribution, a Europe-based collaboration of scientists. Another report said a heatwave of this magnitude so early in the summer would have been virtually impossible 50 years ago and that climate change was “unequivocally” to blame. André Corrêa do Lago, the president of the U.N. climate talks known as COP30, said the heatwave had “helped strengthen the perception of urgency of fighting climate change.” He also said, “The fact that we are living with this amazing heat in London is a strong argument, we need to agree, that we have to take action as soon as possible.”
André Berghegger, the chief executive of the German Association of Towns and Municipalities, urged the public to use water sparingly, saying, “We should rely on voluntary cooperation as long as possible, local authorities should only issue bans if that doesn’t work.”