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Melted asphalt, shoes for dogs: Europe wilts in heat
by Staff Writers
Madrid (AFP) Aug 4, 2018

Fire shuts highway between France and Spain
Madrid (AFP) Aug 4, 2018 - A fire in northeastern Spain on the French border forced authorities to shut a highway linking the two countries for several hours on Saturday at the height of a heatwave, firefighters said.

"We're working together with French firefighters on a fire at la Jonquera," they said on Twitter.

The firefighters in Catalonia said they were aided by six water-dropping planes and helicopters.

They added the blaze, which began around 5:30 pm (1530 GMT) according to French authorities, was quickly brought under control and by the evening, the highway was open again.

The fire comes as France experiences the summer's busiest day on the roads, as July holiday-makers return home and those who vacation in August depart.

Europe's record-high temperatures
Paris (AFP) Aug 3, 2018 - The temperatures peaking in Europe are close to the highest ever on the continent, where 48 degrees Celsius (118.4 Fahrenheit) is the record.

Here are three examples of extreme highs in Europe:

- 1977: Europe record in Greece -

The thermometer hits 48 degrees Celsius on July 10, 1977 at Greece's Eleusis, several kilometres (miles) west of central Athens.

Trapped in a serious drought, the country experiences several wildfires, including in the Tatoi pine forest, the former estate of the royal family 15 kilometres (nine miles) north of the capital.

It is the record high in Europe, according to the World Meteorological Organization.

The agency lists the world record as 56.7 degrees Celsius in Death Valley in California on July 10, 1913, although this is disputed by some experts.

- 2003: 47.3 degrees Celsius in Portugal -

On August 1, 2003 the village of Amareleja, in southern Portugal, the temperature reaches 47.3 degrees Celsius, a record for the country.

Europe is sweltering through a major heatwave which causes an estimated 70,000 deaths from June to September, of which 2,700 in Portugal.

Amareleja is known as the hottest village in Portugal but had by 2005 not recorded a single heat-related death, its mayor tells AFP that year.

"It has always been very hot here," a 72-year old inhabitant says AFP. "It takes no-one by surprise. We are used to it."

- 2017: 47.3 degrees Celsius in Spain -

On July 13, 2017 the mercury rises to 47.3 degrees Celsius in the small town of Montoro near Cordoba in southern Spain. It is the highest temperature ever recorded in Spain.

For a week, daytime temperatures remain above 40 degrees Celsius, according to the El Pais daily.

The town's houses are covered with red sandstone to keep them cool, the paper reports at the time.

It also copes by programming summer events such as the theatre and the circus late in the evening, with the town swimming pool staying open until two in the morning, it says.

Europe sweltered Saturday in intense heat with temperatures hitting near-record highs of 46 degrees Celsius (115 degrees Fahrenheit) in Portugal, while elsewhere the high temperatures, exacerbated fires and melted the asphalt on highways.

Here is a roundup:

- Spain: three dead -

In southern Spain, the heat continued to pound the tourist city of Cordoba reaching 44 C.

In Catalonia in the northeast, a fire on the border with France forced the closure of a highway between both countries for several hours.

By early evening, it was open to traffic again as firefighters said the blaze had been brought under control.

That wasn't the case for a wildfire in San Vicente de Alcantara in the southwest on the border with Portugal, where strong winds and high temperatures were fanning the flames, the regional environment and rural affairs department said.

At least 11 water-dropping planes and other aircraft were helping firefighters on the ground.

The soaring mercury has already claimed the lives of three people who died of heatstroke.

- Portugal: peak heat, fire -

The heatwave was expected to reach its peak on Saturday, said Paula Leitao of the Portuguese Institute for Sea and Atmosphere (IPMA).

In Monchique in the south, a forest fire raged on two fronts, aided by "a temperature of 46 degrees but a real feel of 50 degrees" and very little humidity in the air, Victor Vaz Pinto, head of rescue operations in the district, told local media.

Over 700 firefighters helped by 10 water-dropping planes and helicopters were working to put it out, according to Vaz Pinto and the civil protection agency.

In Lisbon, authorities have closed playgrounds and called on people to avoid picnics and other outdoor activities.

Refuges for homeless people have also opened earlier during the day to allow them to take shelter from the crushing heat.

- Austria: dogs fitted with shoes -

In Vienna, police dogs due to patrol a beach volleyball tournament were fitted with special shoes.

Police said that even if temperatures were not excruciatingly hot, reaching just 34 C on Saturday, the dogs would have to spend hours walking on surfaces exposed to the sun that could easily go over 50 C, and would still need the shoes.

- Netherlands: asphalt melting -

In the Netherlands, authorities closed certain sections of highways where the heat had melted the asphalt.

The central city of Zwolle, meanwhile, started cutting the branches of some 100 poplar trees.

Dutch public television NOS explained that branches could break due to the heat and create danger for drivers or passers-by.

- France: nuclear reactors close -

A total of four nuclear reactors in France have been closed due to the heatwave.

French power company EDF said the measures were taken to avoid temperature hikes in rivers. The nuclear plants draw water from rivers to cool down the reactors and then return it to the river.

Saturday was also the summer's busiest day on the roads, as July holiday-makers returned home and those who vacation in August departed.

By late morning, some 705 kilometres (440 miles) of traffic jams had been reported, according to France's traffic authorities, as the sun beat down and temperatures soared to 41.3 Celsius at Beziers in the deep south. A record 67 departments were on orange heatwave alert for Sunday -- a number also reached on June 21 -- with only the northwest set to be spared another baking day.

- Italy: health warnings -

Italy too faced the summer's busiest day on the roads for the same reason as France and media reported one woman aged 79 had died from apparent heatstroke on a beach in the northwestern Liguria region.

Holiday-makers were expected to face adverse weather conditions wherever they went with no let-up in the scorching heat in the north and violent hailstorms forecast in parts of the south.

This week, the Legambiente association for the defence of the environment published a report on the negative effects of heatwaves.

It revealed that in Lazio, the region where Rome is located, heatwaves had caused around 7,700 deaths since 2000.

- Sweden: Relief -

Following its hottest July in 250 years, rain showers gave Sweden some respite on Saturday across most of the country.

The mercury fell to more typical summer temperatures of around 20-25 C, the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute said.

burs-mbx/har/pvh

EDF - ELECTRICITE DE FRANCE

Lazio

NOS


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A region that holds one of the biggest concentrations of people on Earth could be pushing against the boundaries of habitability by the latter part of this century, a new study shows. Research has shown that beyond a certain threshold of temperature and humidity, a person cannot survive unprotected in the open for extended periods - as, for example, farmers must do. Now, a new MIT study shows that unless drastic measures are taken to limit climate-changing emissions, China's most populous and agri ... read more

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