France Reports 1,000 Excess Deaths During European Heatwave

Summary: France’s public health agency said the country recorded around 1,000 excess deaths during the peak of the heatwave, with older people especially affected, and officials said the total is expected to rise as more data comes in. The World Health Organization said more than 1,300 excess deaths had been recorded across Europe since June 21, as around 150 million people lived under extreme heat that closed schools and strained health systems and power grids. Temperatures above 40°C were reported in parts of Germany, Poland, the Czech Republic and Austria, setting records, while Germany reduced rail services and Leipzig suspended trams after heat damaged infrastructure. In France, storms brought some relief but also power outages, Hungary’s Paks nuclear plant cut output because the Danube was too warm for cooling, and low flow in Italy’s Po River raised concerns for agriculture and wetlands. Forecasters expect cooler weather in much of Western Europe as the heat moves toward Central Europe and the Balkans, while scientists said the record heat would have been virtually impossible without human-caused climate change.

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Health officials warned that heat-related deaths and illnesses may continue rising even after temperatures begin to fall. The heatwave has renewed pressure on European governments to strengthen preparedness for extreme heat, especially in homes, schools, hospitals and transport systems.