A person stands near a fountain in a park as the heat wave grips Europe, in Brussels, Belgium on Jun 18, 2026. (Photo: REUTERS/Yves Herman)
27 Jun 2026 11:12AM
(Updated: 28 Jun 2026 01:39AM)
BERLIN/MILAN/COPENHAGEN: From Scandinavia to the Alps, Europeans endured sweltering conditions on Saturday (Jun 27) as a heatwave linked to dozens of deaths spread eastwards, with record-breaking temperatures breaching 40 degrees Celsius in some spots.Denmark logged its highest-ever temperature after Britain, France, Switzerland and Germany had all experienced record heat in June and the weather system began rolling towards Poland.Scientists said the heatwave would have been virtually impossible without man-made climate change, which has made this week's night-time temperatures 100 times more likely than they would have been even two decades ago."The heatwave is going to peak at the weekend at well over 40°C in some parts of Germany," said Karsten Brandt, a meteorologist at weather forecasting site Donnerwetter.de.
On Friday, a new German record of 41.3°C was hit near the city of Saarbruecken on the French border, Germany's National Meteorological Service said, citing preliminary data.The Danish Meteorological Institute meanwhile reported a 37°C reading north of the city of Aarhus on Saturday, the highest on record since measurements began in 1874.












