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Heat Waves

At least 18 dead in France, including kids in hot car, as Europe bakes

Makini Brice, Emma Pinedo and Sarah Young
Reuters
Updated June 22, 2026, 9:09 p.m. ET

PARIS/MADRID/LONDON - At least 18 people died in France, including two children left in a hot car, as a heat wave hung over Europe, smashing temperature records in several cities on Monday, June 22.

As schools in France closed or modified timetables, forecasters in Britain predicted temperatures could break records for June this week.

The temperature in Bordeaux in France's western wine country rose to 41.9 degrees Celsius (107.4 degrees Fahrenheit), breaking a record set last August. In Poitiers in central France, it reached 41.2 Celsius (106.16 degrees Fahrenheit), beating a previous high set in 1947.

In San Sebastian, in Spain's traditionally cooler north, the temperature was set to reach 40 C, more than double the city's historic average for June 22, according to the Reuters Climate Monitor, which showed Europe as the continent furthest from its historic norm on Monday.

An April report by the World Meteorological Organization found Europe is warming at more than double the global rate.

2 children die in hot car

First responders were unable to resuscitate two children, aged 2 and 4, who were found unconscious by their mother in the family car outside their home, said a prosecutor in Carpentras, southeast France.

Three older adults, aged from 80 to 95, died over the weekend in the Bordeaux region from health issues caused by the heat wave, local government official Sophie Brocas told France TV late on Sunday.

"Swim only in places that are supervised," French Civil Safety service spokesperson Jerome Boulanger said after 13 people were reported drowned from Sunday into Monday. Drowning deaths spiked by 172% in France last year during heat waves as swimmers tried to cool off.

The heat wave affecting large parts of Europe is known as an Omega block because it takes the shape of the Greek letter, with a bulge of hot air in the middle and cooler air on either side, said Clair Barnes, a research associate in extreme weather and climate at Imperial College in London.

"It's drawing warm air up from North Africa, from the Sahara, and that's why we have this really intense heat. It's very slow-moving and it means there's kind of no wind, no breeze for respite," she said.

Heat waves and storms are being intensified by climate change, pushing temperatures higher and causing more rainfall, she said.

UK heat will break June record set in 1976

The Met Office, Britain's national weather forecaster, said on Monday that a four-day heat wave there could push temperatures above 39 degrees Celsius (102.2 degrees Fahrenheit) in some places, easily breaking the June record of 35.6 degrees Celsius (96.08 degrees Fahrenheit) set in 1957 and 1976. Just a few weeks ago, Britain had shattered its record high temperature for May.

"Thirty-six degrees is going to be disgusting," said data scientist Lewis Jennings, out walking in central London.

Paris was due to register its highest temperature for June, with the mercury reaching 38.4 degrees Celsius (101.12 degrees Fahrenheit), according to preliminary numbers from Meteo-France.

"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, spokesperson for Spain's AEMET weather agency.

Red heat wave alerts across Italy

Italy on Monday issued heat wave red alerts for 12 cities.

Utility Iren was doubling workers' shifts and adding generators to address sporadic power cuts in Turin as the electricity grid came under strain, a spokesperson said.

Birds such as swifts, swallows, sparrows, and starlings, which make their nests in the eaves of roofs, have been particularly affected by abnormally high temperatures, said Romaine de Jaegere, founder of the Center for the Rehabilitation of Animals Living in the Wild refuge in Temploux, in Belgium.

"Temperatures on the roofs can sometimes reach 50, even 60 degrees Celsius. So they prefer to jump rather than let themselves die and literally cook in their nests," De Jaegere said, adding that the shelter had received 150 animals in the last three days.

(Reporting by Lewis Macdonald and Makini Brice in Paris, Hugo Lhomedet in Gdansk, Emma Pinedo in Madrid, Zoran Mikletic in Brussels, Sarah Young in London, Francesca Landini and Giancarlo Navach in Milan, and Alvise Armellini in Rome. Writing by Charlie Devereux. Editing by Alexandra Hudson, Milla Nissi-Prussak, and Andrew Heavens)

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