France records around 1,000 additional deaths as extreme heat breaks European records
Source: AP
By KIRSTEN GRIESHABER and JOHN LEICESTER
Updated 12:27 PM CDT, June 28, 2026
Leer en español
BERLIN (AP) France saw around 1,000 additional deaths last week at the height of its record-smashing heat wave, the countrys public health agency said Sunday, as the head of the World Health Organization warned that Europe is now the fastest-warming continent and needs to do more to protect its citizens.
Temperature records were toppled in several countries on the weekend, wildfires were sparked in Germany and Berlin police used water cannons to cool down the crowds.
Meanwhile, the heat wave slowly moved toward eastern parts of the continent.
Germany marked a new record for the third day in a row with 41.7 degrees Celsius (107 degrees Fahrenheit) in Neißemünde, near the border with Poland, which baked under its new all-time high of 40.5 C (104.9 F). The Czech Republic also experienced its hottest day ever with 41.9 C (107.4 F), up from the previous record of 40.9 degrees Celsius (105.6 F) on Saturday.

Read more: https://apnews.com/article/europe-heat-temperature-records-france-deaths-germany-61f444317600cf1bd9af5af84cb582bd
Response to Omaha Steve (Original post)
wcmagumba This message was self-deleted by its author.
róisín_dubh
(12,403 posts)Of my building in England was 87 degrees when I got home from work the other day. Not sure where I was supposed to go- the pub I work in was hotter.
The only places with air conditioning in England are offices and supermarkets/ shops. Maybe the library, I dont know, its from the 1600s. My local corner shop has a/c. Sure, Ill hang out there all day. Theyll love that.
I was in France during the heatwave, in Lourdes. The cathedral, where pilgrims visit, was packed with tourists and had no a/c.
Where the hell should we have gone? Even the Carrefour shop I went to for groceries didnt have a/c. My hotel didnt either.
And were due more heat next week. This is very unusual.
ColoringFool
(1,400 posts)Skittles
(173,663 posts)I spent many years in England so......I do.
mahina
(20,846 posts)I wonder if any DUers know if our additional deaths will be counted and recorded?
SamuelTheThird
(1,485 posts)Particularly in the UK- they are utterly unprepared for the future
chernabogg
(38 posts)Wont they freeze?
SamuelTheThird
(1,485 posts)róisín_dubh
(12,403 posts)But yes, then well be under an ice sheet. Problem solved for air conditioning
artemisia1
(1,931 posts)róisín_dubh
(12,403 posts)When you shoot yourself in the foot with Brexit and have 7 PMs in a decade!
ColoringFool
(1,400 posts)Skittles
(173,663 posts)it's as relevant as having a climate change-denying party in charge of the entire American government
solutions are not a priority during chaos
róisín_dubh
(12,403 posts)Its absolutely relevant.
no_hypocrisy
(55,756 posts)Cheezoholic
(4,133 posts)progree
(13,116 posts)
The graph illustrates that a small shift to the right in the average shifts the whole bell curve to the right, and, in this illustration makes hot weather (orange) much more common and extreme hot weather (red) from almost zero probability to considerable probability
If for example, the average daily high in July in some locale is 85 degrees with a 6 degree standard deviation, and normally distributed: [1]
then the number of July days when the high is 103 or above (3 standard deviations above the mean) is 0.1350% of July days.
In Excel, the formula for finding the area under the normal distribution from 103 to infinity with an average of 85 and standard deviation of 6 is:
=1-NORM.DIST(103,85,6,TRUE)
which gives an answer of 0.001350 which is 0.1350% [2]
OK, so no biggie. So what?
Now let's say that due to climate change so far, the average July daily high temperature has shifted by just 2% to the right, from 85 to 86.7
then the number of July days when the high is 103 or above changes to 0.3297% of July days.
That's a 2.44 fold increase (144% increase) in the number of 103+ degree July days for just a 2% increase in the average.
Shift the average 4% to the right, from 85 to 88.434, and you get 0.7598% of July days, a 5.63 fold increase (463% increase) in the number of 103+ degree July days.
=====================================
Repeating the above exercise, but with a less extreme example, finding the number of days with a high of 97 or above (2 standard deviations above the mean)
with an average July daily high of 85 degrees, the number of July days when the high is 97 degrees or above is 2.275% of July days.
Now lets say that due to climate change so far, the average July daily high temperature has shifted by just 2% to the right, from 85 to 86.7 degrees
then the number of July days when the high is 97 or above changes to 4.302% of July days.
That's a 1.89 fold increase (89% increase) in the number of 97+ degree July days for just a 2% increase in the average.
Shift the average 4% to the right, from 85 to 88.434, and you get 7.669% of July days, a 3.37 fold increase (237% increase) in the number of 97+ July degree days.
=====================================
I have another example of an always hot (in summer) place, Phoenix (with a 105 degree average daily high in July), at https://www.democraticunderground.com/1127174632#post3
The same principle applies to other climate change events, e.g. the severity of storms or what have you -- a small shift in the average results in a huge increase in the number of extreme events.
======= FOOTNOTES ===========
[1] Google searches indicate that yes, temperatures are normally distributed.
Picking New York City for example (with an 84 degree average daily high in July)
https://weatherspark.com/m/23912/7/Average-Weather-in-July-in-New-York-City-New-York-United-States
The 10 and 90 percentile bands are shown on the graph, and they are (reading from the graph and using the peak July date) are 77 to 92, which is a band width of 15.
That occurs when X is -1.281552 to +1.281552 standard deviations
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_deviation
See the big table about 2/3 of the way down the article that has this row:
1.281552sigma 80% 20%
Meaning that between minus and plus 1.281552sigma, 80% are within that confidence interval and 20% are outside of it.
(The greek symbol sigma is the symbol for standard deviation. DU replaces it with a "?" so I show "sigma" in the above)
So for a 10 to 90 bandwidth of 15, the standard deviation is 5.85228
(15/2 = 7.5, 7.5/1.281552 = 5.85228)
So, rounding, I used 6 as my standard deviation in the above example.
[2] The TRUE means its the cumulative normal distribution as opposed to the probability density function
The area under the normal distribution curve from minus infinity to 103 (and having an average of 85 and standard deviation of 6) is NORM.DIST(103,85,6,TRUE)
The area from 103 to infinity is
1-NORM.DIST(103,85,6,TRUE)
======================================================
Why your air conditioning bill is about to soar - the energy required rises with the SQUARE of the temperature difference
https://www.democraticunderground.com/1127174891
ColoringFool
(1,400 posts)progree
(13,116 posts)Last edited Mon Jun 29, 2026, 03:36 AM - Edit history (1)
And why air conditioning load and costs are increasing and going to increase substantially (on top of what's being caused by data centers)
I'm not concerned about just today.
And I doubt that these stats mean nothing to most of the humans in danger now. Or to the people who may not be in danger right now, but care about those who are. Just like the reasons behind climate change are not meaningless to most people, it's only the blatantly anti-science MAGAT types and a few others, sigh, who don't care about the science behind it.
Anyway, my post above was not directed at those in danger now. It's very unlikely they are reading DU if their survival is in doubt.
Seeking Serenity
(3,360 posts)That is, eliminating air con? Wouldn't the climate cool off if the world forgot that AC ever existed?
We can do it!
BettyBlueDot
(41 posts)That's a conundrum. I grew up in 60s, New Orleans, subtropical. We didn't have AC.. not in home, school, auto. We also didn't hv Asian Tiger mosquito, imported in 1980. Things change. Last time was w/o power was Hurricane Ida, almost a week. My house is slab and hv ceramic tile kitchen floor. I slept on that floor for that week, just to stay cool enough to survive. As an older person, heat/humidity is mighty debilitating. I go out at 6am, dawn, with an ice cap, to mow grass. And thank the AC when I get back inside, dripping wet with sweat. Our body has natural cooling-- sweat is supposed to evaporate, thus cooling. However when humidity is 95 &abv, that doesn't happen. So, I get your point, in a perfect world, yes, we shouldn't need that devil AC. I wish I didn't.
ColoringFool
(1,400 posts)progree
(13,116 posts)Europes Come-to-AC Moment, The Atlantic, 6/26/26
https://www.theatlantic.com/health/2026/06/europe-air-conditioning/687711/
https://archive.ph/plDti
European summers are getting brutally hot. So why is air conditioning so rare?, CNN, 6/23/26
https://www.cnn.com/climate/europe-heat-air-conditioning
BettyBlueDot
(41 posts)Reminds me of Twilight Zone episode, Midnight Sun. Lois Nettleton suffering fm heat. People freaking out. Then the twist ending. Just like Idiocracy, now Twilight Zone is our reality. "This is the way the world ends Not with a bang but a whimper. " TS Eliot
Omaha Steve
(110,671 posts)We have hundreds of autographs.
https://graveyardsofomaha.com/tz2002.html
https://graveyardsofomaha.com/tz2004.html
BettyBlueDot
(41 posts)OMG, Beverly Garland. An actual Holiday Inn. How amazing. What a trip you had. Hv Decoy photos, don't know how to post here
Omaha Steve
(110,671 posts)Your photo needs to be on the net already. Put your cursor over the photo and right click. Select copy image link. Then come to the DU and left click. You're done. Let me know IF you need more help.
OS
fujiyamasan
(2,197 posts)Warm but overall pleasant.