Europe braced for another day of extreme heat as warnings issued across UK, France and Italy – live

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Key events

France breaks hottest ever night record set earlier this week

Meanwhile, France experienced its hottest night from Wednesday to Thursday since measurements began in 1947, the national weather agency said, breaking a record set, erm, earlier in the week.

The windows of a Haussmann-style residential building are seen covered with emergency blankets to shield them from the sun in Paris, France.
The windows of a Haussmann-style residential building are seen covered with emergency blankets to shield them from the sun in Paris, France. Photograph: Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

The national temperature indicator – an average of daytime and night-time temperatures across 30 stations – reached 22C, Météo-France said, citing provisional data, coming days after a record 21.6C was measured Monday to Tuesday.

Germany's DB gives passengers option to cancel planned rail trips this weekend due to extreme weather

Over in Germany, the country’s rail operator Deutsche Bahn, or DB, offered passengers booked for this weekend an option to cancel their ticket free of charge.

The option is available to all passengers who booked their tickets before 23 June, and were due to travel between today and 30 June.

DB said it was offering this option as a “goodwill gesture” due to “the increasing heat.”

Passengers board an fast train of German rail operator Deutsche Bahn in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany.
Passengers board an fast train of German rail operator Deutsche Bahn in Frankfurt am Main, western Germany. Photograph: Kirill Kudryavtsev/AFP/Getty Images

Earlier this week, Germany’s rail network ground to a halt late on Tuesday as a result of maintenance work that went wrong, leaving hundreds of thousands of passengers unable to get home as the national operator faced widespread criticism over the chaos.

'This is what climate crisis looks like in practice, and it's just getting started'

Harriet Richards
Assistant environment editor

Simon Stiell, the UN climate chief, warned that “Europe’s savage heatwave has the fingerprints of the climate crisis all over it” and is “the latest price to pay for fossil fuel pollution baking our planet.”

“Schools closing, the vulnerable dying, economies sweating: this is what the climate crisis looks like in practice, and it’s just getting started.

A child stands at an entrance queue area near the Eiffel Tower, which was temporarily closed due to extreme heat.
A child stands at an entrance queue area near the Eiffel Tower, which was temporarily closed due to extreme heat. Photograph: Annice Lyn/Getty Images

He continued:

Until humanity stops burning colossal amounts of coal, oil and gas, extreme heat will keep getting worse, and other climate impacts – from mega-droughts, floods, wildfires and storms – will keep hammering every economy and population harder each year.

With billions of households, businesses and all economies still feeling the heat of the latest fossil fuel cost chaos, and thousands dying in a single day in some regions as temperatures soar, stronger climate actions can’t wait.

The solutions are equally clear: a faster shift to renewables – which are now much cheaper than fossil fuels – as well as protecting forests and boosting climate resilience. Many countries need support to embrace clean energy and protect their peoples. There’s no time to lose.

Heatwave linked to 212 deaths in Spain, estimates show

A heatwave that has gripped much of Europe and seen temperature records tumble is linkable with 212 deaths in Spain between Sunday and Wednesday, estimated from a public institute showed, AFP reported.

The MoMo monitoring system compiles daily death statistics in Spain and calculates the difference in mortality by comparing them with the levels foreseeable based on historical records.

A woman uses an umbrella to cover from the sun at El Retiro park in Madrid, Spain.
A woman uses an umbrella to cover from the sun at El Retiro park in Madrid, Spain. Photograph: Pablo Blázquez Domínguez/Getty Images

UK records its hottest June day and France its hottest day ever as heatwave sweeps Europe

Ajit Niranjan and Ashifa Kassam

Heatwaves kill tens of thousands of people across Europe each year and the most scorching extremes have grown hotter, longer and more common as the planet has warmed. Climate breakdown is thought to have increased temperatures by 2C to 4C, according to a rapid analysis published by ClimaMeter on Monday.

Windows covered by sheets in an attempt to reflect the heat as France experiences a heatwave, in Nantes, western France.
Windows covered by sheets in an attempt to reflect the heat as France experiences a heatwave, in Nantes, western France. Photograph: Sebastien Salom-Gomis/AFP/Getty Images

Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the director general of the WHO, said Europe’s heatwave was “putting lives at risk” on Wednesday. He urged world leaders to invest more in resilient health systems and act faster on the climate emergency.

Europe is fastest-warming continent ahead of Asia and North America

“The data [is] clear: temperatures across Europe are rising at roughly twice the global average rate, increasing the likelihood and severity of extreme heat in the future,” he said. “We cannot afford further delay.”

101 million Europeans to experience temperatures above 35C today

As the heatwave is set to hit large parts of Germany today, at least 101 million people in Europe are expected to experience temperatures in excess of 35C on Thursday, according to AFP estimates.

That’s a higher number than yesterday’s 94 millions.

General view of tennis spectators in Eastbourne during the heatwave as they take cover under hats.
General view of tennis spectators in Eastbourne during the heatwave as they take cover under hats. Photograph: Isabel Infantes/Reuters

Maximum temperatures are expected to surpass 30C for more than 380 million people across Europe excluding Turkey, representing nearly two-thirds of the population, AFP added, according to an analysis based on forecasts from the German weather service and 2025 population projections from the Joint Research Centre.

UK universities cancel student open days due to extreme heat

Richard Adams

Richard Adams

Education editor

The heatwave continues to disrupt the British education system with University College London, one of the UK’s largest universities, cancelling its student open days planned for Friday and Saturday, relieving thousands of prospective undergraduates and parents from travelling to central London.

A person uses a portable fan on an underground train in central London.
A person uses a portable fan on an underground train in central London. Photograph: Toby Shepheard/AFP/Getty Images

UCL said in a statement:

“Please do not travel to campus for these events. We have taken this action with the safety and wellbeing of our visitors, students and staff as our primary consideration, and we are sorry for any inconvenience caused.”

Imperial College London also cancelled its open day today, and has asked students to join an “online open day” instead. King’s College London has confirmed that its open day on Saturday is going ahead.

Open days are a crucial part of UK university recruitment drives, allowing potential students to inspect campus facilities and accommodation as well as meeting faculty and learn about courses on offer.

Paris mayor reports 'increase in mortality' due to heatwave

Paris mayor Emmanuel Gregoire said there had been an “increase in mortality” in the capital owing to the heatwave, without giving any figures, AFP reported.

He said “pretty much all our indicators are in a critical state”, including calls to emergency medical services, calls to the fire brigade, ER admissions, and deaths, he told local TV.

Heatwave hits in Jardin des Tuileries, Paris, France.
Heatwave hits in Jardin des Tuileries, Paris, France. Photograph: Apaydin Alain/ABACA/Shutterstock

Morning opening: The heatwave continues

Jakub Krupa

Jakub Krupa

Ready for another day of temperatures way above 30C?

People browse fans and air conditioning units in a homeware store, amid a heatwave in Paris, France.
People browse fans and air conditioning units in a homeware store, amid a heatwave in Paris, France. Photograph: Tom Nicholson/Reuters

The European heatwave of 2026 begins to slowly move eastwards, but things are still going to affect millions of Europeans.

The red extreme heat warning continues in the UK; 72 out of 96 mainland French departments are covered by its French equivalent, as are 17 Italian cities – and these numbers are actually even higher than yesterday.

It’s 33C in Nantes, 31C in Paris and it’s not even 10am local time.

We will see the highs of 39C in Paris, 36C in Germany’s Cologne and Italy’s Bologna, 35C in Belgium’s Brussels, 33C in Berlin, and 31C in London.

And Bratislava, Budapest, Prague, and Warsaw look on, wondering about what is going to happen as the temperatures there are expected to hit, erm, 40C over the weekend and on Monday.

I will bring you all the latest updates on how the continent is (desperately trying) to cope in these temperatures.

You can also tell us how you are doing and what are your strategies for this heat:

It’s Thursday, 25 June 2026, it’s Jakub Krupa here, and this is Europe Live.

Good morning.

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