Wednesday, July 8, 2026

UK waters hit with extreme heatwave as global sea temperatures reach record levels. Experts warn that some marine species are at risk of ‘mass mortality events’ in ever-warming oceans

 

The archipelago of St Kilda. Marine temperatures in UK seas have been on average 2C higher than usual, with some areas 4-5C warmer. Photograph: Murdo MacLeod/The Guardian

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UK waters are being hit with an “extreme” marine heatwave, the Met Office has said, as scientists warn that high ocean temperatures globally could result in “mass-mortality events” for some species.

The forecasters said these elevated temperatures have developed rapidly because of last month’s heat dome, during which most of Europe sweltered in its worst ever heatwave that scientists said would have been impossible without the climate crisis.

The third heatwave of the summer has arrived in the UK this week, with temperatures on track to exceed 30C for up to 10 consecutive days. Dr Ségolène Berthou, an air-sea interaction specialist at the Met Office, said these atmospheric conditions drive the marine heatwave.

“The ocean didn’t have enough time to cool down between the two land heatwaves,” she said.

 

Oceans absorb more than 90% of the excess energy in the Earth system, which is primarily caused by burning fossil fuels.

Berthou said this is the third and most intense marine heatwave the UK has seen this year, with temperatures on average 2C warmer than usual and with some locations reaching “severe” conditions where the water temperature is 4-5C warmer than usual. “There’s no sign of an end to it,” Berthou added.

The Copernicus Climate Change Service and the Copernicus Marine Service have confirmed that global sea surface temperatures have surpassed the previous records for this time of year, which were set in 2023 and 2024. This had been anticipated to follow the development of El Niño conditions, which scientists forecast to be the strongest in decades

António Guterres, the UN secretary general, speaks at a conference on the future of AI in Geneva. Photograph: Xinhua/Shutterstock

The UN secretary general, António Guterres, said the world must treat the arrival of El Niño conditions as the “urgent climate warning it is”.

He said: “The only effective response is climate action equal to the crisis: ending the addiction to fossil fuels, accelerating the shift to renewables, protecting the most vulnerable, and delivering early warning systems for all.”

 

Prof John Pinnegar, principal scientist and lead adviser at the Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, said these extreme marine heatwave conditions can result in “mass-mortality events” for some marine species and alter the distribution of commercially important fish and shellfish.

He said: “Prolonged periods of elevated sea water temperatures can also encourage new species to visit UK waters, establish new populations, potentially shaking up UK ecosystems.”

Record numbers of octopuses were found off the south-west coast of England last year, transforming the fishing industry and the marine ecosystem. A record 100 tonnes of octopus was sold in one day at Brixham market last month.

Alemanha teve 5.655 mortes a mais durante onda de calor em junho

 

Termômetros passaram dos 40ºC na Alemanha durante a onda de calor no final de junho



Termômetro marca 41°C em Berlim, na Alemanha, no dia 27 de junho deste ano - Axel Schmidt/Reuters 


  • País superou marcas históricas de temperatura por três dias seguidos
  • Em dias quentes, chegou-se a registrar o asfalto derretido perto de trilhos de bonde


  • Redação DW

     País registrou 23,6 mil óbitos de 22 a 28 de junho, quando recordes de temperatura foram quebrados, contra uma média de 18,1 mil no mesmo período de 2022 a 2025. 

    A Alemanha registrou 5.655 mil mortes a mais que o esperado na penúltima semana de junho, quando o país foi varrido por uma onda de calor extremo que quebrou recordes históricos de temperatura, informou o Escritório Federal de Estatísticas.

    Foram 23.665 mil óbitos de 22 a 28 de junho, contra uma média de 18.179 no mesmo período dos quatro anos anteriores. Os dados são preliminares, mas, como apontou o portal n-tv, há 26 anos não morriam tantas pessoas em uma única semana de verão.

    Naquela semana, o país superou marcas históricas de calor por três dias seguidos. A pior marca, 41,7ºC medidos em 28 de junho, foi registrada em Coschen, em Brandemburgo, no leste do país. Na virada de 26 para 27, o país teve sua noite mais quente, com sufocantes 29,4ºC medidos em Kubschütz, na Saxônia, também no leste do país.

    Na mesma época, o calor extremo produziu cenas insólitas na Alemanha, como o asfalto derretido no entorno dos trilhos de bonde em Leipzig, no estado da Saxônia, e autoestradas "estouradas" pelo país.

    Calor levou à interrupção do serviço de bondes em Leipzig

    Uma semana antes, de 15 a 21 de junho, as autoridades alemãs contabilizaram 18.427 mortos, muito próximo da média dos quatro anos anteriores para o mesmo período.

    Onda de calor castigou boa parte da Europa

    Outros países europeus também foram duramente afetados pelo calor no final de junho.

     

    Dados preliminares apontam mais de 4,7 mil mortes adicionais para o período na França, Holanda, Bélgica e Espanha, com a expectativa que o número aumente ainda mais, conforme outros países ainda atualizam seus balanços.

    Embora o alto número de mortes esteja muito provavelmente relacionado ao clima extremo, não se pode falar automaticamente em mortes por calor. Esses casos são difíceis de determinar, principalmente quando se trata de idosos e pessoas com doenças preexistentes.

    "Que as altas temperaturas têm influência é incontestável — mas em que medida muitas vezes não está claro", disse o diretor médico do serviço de emergência da cidade de Colônia, Alexander Lechleuthner, citado pela revista alemã Der Spiegel.

    A crise climática tem tornado ondas de calor mais intensas e frequentes. Por isso, alguns especialistas apontam que as altas temperaturas serão cada vez mais consideradas um fator de risco à saúde.

    "Com certeza temos mais mortes associadas ao calor do que ao trânsito", afirmou Uwe Janssens, diretor da Associação Interdisciplinar Alemã de Cuidados Intensivos e Medicina de Emergência (DIVI), à Spiegel.

    Ao portal t-online, Sebastian Klüsener, diretor de pesquisa do Instituto Federal de Pesquisa sobre População, disse que se o número de mortos nas próximas semanas se mantiver nos níveis esperados em vez de diminuir, é sinal de que o calor provavelmente não só "antecipou" a morte de quem já tinha baixa expectativa de vida, mas também precipitou a morte de pessoas consideradas mais saudáveis.


     

    Monday, July 6, 2026

    Europe’s livestock sector faces heatwave reckoning after millions of chickens die

     





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    France’s late-June heatwave killed an estimated 2.5 million to 3 million broiler chickens, according to Le Monde, with Brittany among the worst-hit regions. The scale of mortality overwhelmed rendering services and forced authorities to allow emergency on-farm burial in some cases, turning the heatwave into an animal welfare crisis and a logistical emergency for farmers. 

    The heatwave’s impact extended beyond France. In Belgium, farmers warned that cows and pigs were suffering heat stress, reducing feed intake, milk yields, and growth rates. The rolling effects are expected to result in losses for dairy and meat production. 

     

    The deaths have opened a wider debate over how European livestock farming can protect animals and farmers from climate extremes, while also cutting the emissions that help drive those extremes. 

     

    Climate change-driven heatwaves

    World Weather Attribution, an international scientific collaboration that studies the influence of climate change on extreme weather events, says this heatwave would have been “virtually impossible” 50 years ago without human-caused climate change.

    The organization concluded that climate change is “unequivocally to blame” for its severity. It says a similar heatwave in 1976 would have been about 3.5°C cooler, and that the overnight temperatures experienced in Western Europe in the final week of June are about 100 times more likely today than during the 2003 European heatwave. 

    We spoke with World Weather Attribution, which told us that Europe’s infrastructure, including farms and animal housing systems, was largely built for cooler historical conditions. This means Europe’s increasingly frequent heatwaves are a growing concern for animal welfare and livestock farmers.

     



    Heatwave hell for farmed animals

    Last year, Compassion in World Farming released a report on how climate change-linked extreme weather impacts farmed animals. The report says that heat stress can seriously harm livestock, causing breathing and heart problems, dehydration, weaker immunity, reduced fertility, lower milk production — and in severe cases, death.

    “Factory farming contributes significantly to climate change, and, as temperatures rise, animals trapped in factory farms suffer even more,” Compassion in World Farming tells Food Ingredients First. “Millions of animals are confined in overcrowded sheds, left without enough water, and transported in vehicles where temperatures can become dangerously high.”

    Brittany’s agriculture authority has reported significant deaths as a result of June’s heatwave, mainly on poultry farms. It has fast-tracked burial exemptions for farms hit by mass poultry or pig mortalities and expects a return to “normal collection and processing capacities” in early July.

     

    European Livestock Voice responds

    We also spoke with Anton van den Brink, chair of European Livestock Voice, a Brussels-based livestock-sector coalition. Van den Brink accepts that the livestock sector is both vulnerable to climate-driven heatwaves and a contributor to the emissions driving them.

    “But the discussion needs to be fair and practical,” he tells us. He refers to a leaked draft of the EU Livestock Strategy, expected to be published this week, which suggests EU livestock accounts for 8% of total emissions in the EU (66% of agricultural emissions), around 4% of global agriculture emissions, and less than 1% of global total emissions.

    “Livestock farmers are on the frontline of climate change: heatwaves directly affect animal welfare, productivity, farm workers, feed availability, and farm economics. At the same time, livestock production has emissions, and the sector accepts its responsibility to reduce them,” says van den Brink.

    The transition to more sustainable livestock farming should be done, van den Brink says, through innovation, efficiency, and investment — not by pushing production out of Europe. “The worst outcome would be to weaken European farmers, while increasing imports from regions with lower standards,” he says.

     

     Preparing for future heatwaves

    Compassion in World Farming has called for robust emergency protections ahead of further heatwaves. These include reliable access to water, lower stocking densities, good ventilation, and restrictions on transporting animals during extreme heat.

    Commercial broiler farming, it adds, should urgently transition to slower-growing breeds, which are more resilient in higher temperatures.

     ¨Although these measures will help in the short term, the long-term solution is to move away from factory farming toward higher-welfare, more resilient farming systems that are better for animals, people, and the planet,” the NGO says

     

    For European Livestock Voice, the question is how to support a more adaptable, lower-emission livestock sector.

    “Adaptation has to become part of everyday farm management. This includes better ventilation and cooling systems, shade, access to water, adjusted feeding strategies, heat-resilient housing design, early-warning systems, contingency planning, and investment in animal health and welfare monitoring,” says van den Brink.

     

    Costly business for farmers

    However, transitioning to more climate-resilient farming is expensive, cautions van den Brink.

    “Farmers cannot be expected to carry the full burden alone, especially when many are already under severe economic pressure. Public policy must support investment in climate-resilient farms through targeted funding, faster permits, practical guidance, and research that works under real farm conditions.”

    He says a “sensible approach” includes improving feed efficiency, animal health, breeding, manure management, renewable energy use, precision farming, and circular use of resources.

    The deaths in France reveal that extreme heat is testing the limits of Europe’s livestock systems. The question now is whether farms can adapt quickly enough to protect animals and farmers, while also reducing the sector’s contribution to the warming that is making such heatwaves more severe.


    'Hotter and hotter and hotter' - Europe's new climate in seven charts

     

    Outdoor workers can be particularly vulnerable to the effects of extreme heat, such as that seen in the UK and Europe last month

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    Sunday, July 5, 2026

    At least 25 people die in US as record heatwave scorches swaths of country. More than 20 states reported temperatures above 100F as heat dome sits over eastern US during holiday weekend

    A woman grabs water from a bucket on the National Mall in Washington DC during 250th anniversary celebrations on 4 July. Photograph: Dominic Gwinn/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock

     





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    At least about two dozen people have died amid the perilous climate crisis-driven heatwave that has scorched swaths of the US with record temperatures.

    As a huge heat dome sits over the county’s eastern half, extreme heat gripped millions of people in the days leading up to the US’s semiquincentennial on Saturday – and beyond it. More than 20 states experienced have reported stifling temperatures more than 100F (38C), marring celebrations. And more than 140 million people remained under active heat alerts across the US on Sunday.

    Officials in New Jersey believe the extreme heat was a factor in the deaths of 22 people across 10 counties there, mostly in central and northern parts of the state. Many of the individuals were found in homes with no air conditioning, outside their residences, on the street and in parked cars, according to officials.

     

    The first of those deaths occurred on Thursday, and the ages of the deceased in question mostly range from their mid-30s to their 80s. Preliminary findings cause investigators to believe the deaths are heat-related, though the chief state medical examiner for New Jersey would later determine the exact cause of death for each.

    “This is not a typical summer heatwave,” the New Jersey department of public health said in a statement. “This type of heat can quickly become life-threatening to humans and to animals of all ages.”

     

    The National Weather Service (NWS) has said cool air from the north in the coming days is going to lower some of the most extreme temperatures in the region, including New Jersey. The Fifa World Cup final is scheduled to be held in the New Jersey city of East Rutherford on 19 July.

    Elsewhere, a heat-related death was reported in Cook county, Illinois, Natalia Derevyanny, a government spokesperson, told NBC News. The cause of that death was recorded as organic cardiovascular disease – with heat stress as a contributing factor.

    Hinds county in Mississippi reported the death of 74-year-old Mitchell Ray Cooley due to heat exposure on Thursday, state officials said. Cooley had been reported missing, and his body was found the next day behind a gas station, the county coroner said in a statement.

     

    People watch the Sail 250 parade of ships at Liberty State Park in Jersey City, New Jersey, on 4 July. Photograph: Adam Gray/Reuters

     

    “Mr Cooley suffered from a medical condition that impaired his judgment,” the coroner’s office said. “Based on the investigative findings, scene examination, and subsequent evaluation, the cause of death has been determined to be weather-related heat exposure. At this time, there is no indication of foul play.”

    Meanwhile, on 27 June, Martha Irene Van Egmond, 83, died in Bolton, Mississippi, after falling in her garden. When her husband, Rick, tried to help her up, he fell too. The couple were unable to get up and spent hours in the heat.

    Rick Van Egmond said he and his wife called out for help, and eventually two men from a nearby apartment complex came – but it was too late for Martha. She died surrounded by flowers, doing what she loved, he said to local news outlet WAPT.

    Jeramiah Howard, Hinds county’s chief death investigator, attributed her death to the heat combined with her age, WAPT reported.

    A person cools off with water from an open fire hydrant during a heatwave on the West Side of Chicago, Illinois, on 2 July. Photograph: Octavio Jones/AFP/Getty Images

    As Donald Trump spoke during rain-dampened celebrations in Washington DC on Saturday, emergency services there had treated 51 people with heat-related issues as of 8pm ET, with 12 taken to nearby hospitals, according to local emergency response officials.

    Other events scheduled for Saturday – including the Independence Day parade in DC – were cancelled amid the blistering heat. Among other weather-related disruptions, Trump’s so-called Great American State Fair on the National Mall also temporarily closed down on Friday after reports that 44 visitors had been treated for heat-related illnesses.

    The worst of the heat started moving out of the US’s north-east and midwest regions by Sunday, shifting farther south into the mid-Atlantic and south-eastern parts of the country.

    But scientists warn that heatwaves with extreme temperatures are indications that the world must lower the greenhouse gas pollution driving the global climate crisis.

    The NWS is urging the public to avoid heat sickness by drinking plenty of fluids as well as staying out of the sun and in air-conditioned environments. Officials have also asked people to check on relatives and neighbors

    Saturday, June 27, 2026

    Why the French are painting their windows with chalk to beat the heat



     

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    A simple, low-tech remedy may help cool homes. Here's the science behind the trend.

    As record-breaking heat sweeps over France, some shops are running out of a simple, cheap and unexpected product – crushed chalk.

    Known as Blanc de Meudon, or Meudon whiting, it is normally used to make paints or as a cleaning product. But faced with punishing temperatures, there are reports that ingenious people have been using the chalky material as a home remedy against the heat, covering windows in schools and private homes.

    Mixed with water, then painted on glass, the result is a milky, whitish coating that lets in some light but reflects the heat. And a growing body of research suggests that there may be some solid science behind the DIY cooling hack.

     With heatwaves growing ever more frequent and intense due to rising global temperatures – and posing a particular danger to populations in cities – could a simple lick of white paint help people cope better when it hots up?

     

    Radiative cooling

    White paint – on walls and roofs, usually – is widely known to have a cooling effect. Generally speaking, white surfaces reflect sunlight and heat, while dark surfaces absorb it. This principle can be used to cool buildings and cities. Commercially available white paint on a surface can reduce temperatures on the other side by at least 1.7C (3F) compared to the ambient temperature at noon.

    Paints specially developed to maximise cooling, such as ultra-white paint, have been shown to reduce the indoor temperature by several degrees by not only reflecting sunlight but also shedding heat through a process know as "radiative cooling".

    One study of ultra-white paint found it could reflect up to 98.1% of sunlight, while a previous formulation reflected 95.5% of sunlight. Another study showed that combining it with a layer of ultra-black paint underneath could lower daytime temperatures by up to 7.6C (14F).

     One of the reasons why chalk might be effective, however, lies in the properties of its main component, calcium carbonate, which is not only highly reflective but also resistant to solar radiation. This property has led some researchers to use nanoparticles of calcium carbonate in new kinds of "super cool" paint.

     

    "These kinds of particles are widely used in radiative cooling paint, also in our super cool paint," says Jiashuo Wang, a student at the University of New South Wales in Sydney, Australia, who is part of a team working on cooling paint.

    Chalk has also been used as a coating for fabric that keeps the wearer cool. Particles of calcium carbonate – the main ingredient in chalk – are good at reflecting ultraviolet and near-infrared light (the portion of sunlight that transmits heat).

    In addition, chalk is considered to be relatively benign in terms of its health and environmental impact – though there may be some risks to respiratory health from indoor chalk use, and inhaling particles.

    Blanc de Meudon, or Meudon whiting, is helping the French stay cool this summer (Credit: Getty Images)

    White windows and 'le cool roofing'

    According to French media reports, demand for Blanc de Meudon is leading to stock shortages around the country as people struggle against temperatures of more than 40C (104F).

     

    Blanc de Meudon is traditionally used to whiten shop windows during renovations or by gardeners in their greenhouses. But after the chalk-paint trick circulated on social media, demand for the product soared, French newspapers report.

    "We'd known about the idea for a while, we talked about it during the last heatwave but forgot to buy any," Ouest France quotes a shopper called Philippe. "Now it's too late! It's sold out everywhere!"

    Some French schools have also used the chalk paint on their windows, though an official warned that it's "not a miracle solution" and that properly insulated roofs are needed instead.

    People have also whitened the windows of their apartments.

    The chalk, as well as white paint more generally, is cheap. And unlike air conditioning, which worsens the overall heat effect and emissions problem by consuming energy and releasing heat outside, paint only uses energy when it's produced.

     

    More like this:

    The white roofs cooling Indian slums

    The simple ways cities can adapt to heatwaves

    How to exercise safely in hot weather 

    White-painted cool roofs – also known as "le cool roofing" in France – are also getting more attention there as a sustainable, low-tech way of combating extreme heat. The idea taps into a long tradition in many southern parts of Europe, such as Greece, of painting houses white to ward off the heat. 

    One study suggests that cool roofs – roofs painted white or with reflective coating – could have cooled London "by about 0.8C (1.4F) on average during a heatwave, preventing the heat-related deaths of an estimated 249 people". (Read about how women in India are using white paint to cool their homes.) 

     

    For those interested in another home remedy, there is an alternative: yoghurt. An experiment by researchers in the UK found that the indoor temperature of a house with yoghurt-painted windows was on average 0.6C (1.08F) cooler. They found that a thin film of the dairy product could lead to rooms being up to 3.5C (6.3F) cooler when it was "hot and sunny". While a smelly solution at first, the odour apparently disappears quickly as the yoghurt paint dries.

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    Snow and ice on Swiss glaciers melting at alarming rate amid heatwave, expert says

     

    Swiss glaciers are set to lose an enormous amount of ice and snow due to the heatwave battering Europe. Photograph: freeartist/Alamy

     Accumulation on Switzerland’s glaciers from last winter expected to all be gone by Monday amid ‘enormous’ melt rates across Alps

     Agence France-Presse

     

    Swiss glaciers are set to lose an enormous amount of ice due to the heatwave battering Europe, according to the head of Glacier Monitoring in Switzerland (Glamos).

    The snow and ice accumulated last winter by Switzerland’s glaciers is expected to have all melted away by Monday, marking the alarming second-earliest arrival on record of the tipping point known as glacier loss day.

    All further melting between now and October will see the size of glaciers in the Swiss Alps shrink.

    In data going back to 2000, the only time that the tipping point arrived even earlier was in 2022, when it came on 26 June. The grim scenario is driven by the current heatwave, as well as the one in May – both coming on the back of another winter with poor snowfall.

    “We’re just seeing enormous ablation, ice melt rates and snow melt rates all over the Alps,” Glamos network chief Matthias Huss told AFP on Friday, as multiple Swiss weather stations registered new all-time records.

     

    “We are three months too early compared to a healthy state.”

    This century, the tipping point, on average, has been reached in mid-August – already bad news for the nation’s glaciers, which are shrinking at a staggering rate.

    Much of the water that flows into the Rhine and the Rhone – two of Europe’s major rivers – comes from the Alpine glaciers.

    Huss said he had just returned from the Rhone Glacier and that in the 10 days since his previous visit “there was one metre of ice melted in the vertical direction – one metre of melting within just the last 10 days”.

     

    “It’s very impressive to see, and this is just the effect of the heatwave.”

    “The more days that are added that are very high temperatures, not even mattering whether it’s 35C or 40C, this is just very bad for the glaciers.”

    Huss said the “very bad state of the glaciers at the moment” was down to a “combination of bad circumstances”, including less snowfall and the arrival of dust from the Sahara desert in March.

    He said 2026 was “surprisingly similar” to 2022, which for glaciers was “by far the most extreme year ever recorded in the Alps, with melt rates shattering everything we had seen before”.

    He said this year had seen 25% less snow replenishing the surface of the glaciers compared with the 2010-20 figures. Meanwhile May was warm, causing the snowpack to disappear earlier.

    Glaciers in the Swiss Alps began to retreat about 170 years ago, initially modestly, but in recent decades melting has accelerated significantly as the climate warms.

    The volume of Swiss glaciers shrank by 38% between 2000 and 2024. Huss said Switzerland had already lost 1,200 glaciers in the past 50 years, and now only 1,300 were left.

    “Those lost were small glaciers, but they were still relevant in peripheral regions of the Alps,” the glaciologist said.

    “If warming continues as it did over the last decades, by 2100 we will only be left with some little remnants of ice.”

    UK waters hit with extreme heatwave as global sea temperatures reach record levels. Experts warn that some marine species are at risk of ‘mass mortality events’ in ever-warming oceans

      The archipelago of St Kilda. Marine temperatures in UK seas have been on average 2C higher than usual, with some areas 4-5C warmer. Pho...