At least 18 people died in France, including two children left in a hot car, as ‌a heatwave hung over Europe, smashing temperature records in several cities on Monday.As schools in France closed or modified timetables, forecasters in Britain predicted temperatures could break records for June this week.The temperature in Bordeaux in France’s western wine ​country rose to 41.9 degrees , breaking a record set last August. In Poitiers in central France it reached 41.2 degrees, beating a previous high set in 1947.In San Sebastian, in Spain’s traditionally cooler north, the temperature was set to reach 40 degrees, more than double the city’s historic average for June 22nd according to the Reuters Climate Monitor, which showed Europe as the continent furthest from its historic norm on Monday.A pharmacy sign displays the temperature in Beziers, southern France. Photograph: Gabriel Bouys/AFP/Getty Images An ​April report by the World Meteorological Organization found Europe is warming at more than double the global rate.First responders were unable to resuscitate two children, aged two and four, who were found ⁠unconscious by their mother in the family car outside their home, said a prosecutor in Carpentras, southeast France.Three elderly people, aged between 80 and 95, died over ‌the weekend ‌in ​the Bordeaux region from health issues caused by the heatwave, local government official Sophie Brocas told France TV late on Sunday.“Swim only in places that are supervised,” French civil safety service spokesperson Jerome Boulanger said after 13 people were reported drowned from Sunday into Monday. Drowning deaths ⁠spiked by 172 per cent in France last year during heatwaves as swimmers tried ​to cool off.The heatwave affecting large parts of Europe is known as an Omega ​block because it takes the shape of the Greek letter, with a bulge of hot air in the middle and cooler air either side, said Clair Barnes, a research associate in ‌extreme weather and climate at Imperial College in London.“It’s drawing warm air ​up from North Africa, from the Sahara, and that’s why we have this really intense heat. It’s very slow moving and it means there’s kind of no wind, ⁠no breeze for respite,” she said.People shelter from the sun at Parliament Square, central London. Photograph: Jordan Pettitt/PA Wire