BSS
  22 Apr 2024, 09:10

Europe suffered record number of 'extreme heat stress' days in 2023: monitors

 PARIS, April 22, 2024 (BSS/AFP) - Europe endured a record number of

"extreme heat stress" days in 2023, two leading climate monitors said Monday,
underscoring the threat of increasingly deadly summers across the continent.

In a year of contrasting extremes, Europe witnessed scorching heatwaves but
also catastrophic flooding, withering droughts, violent storms and its
largest wildfire.

These disasters inflicted billions of dollars in damages and impacted more
than two million people, the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service and the
UN's World Meteorological Organization (WMO) said in a new joint report.

The consequences for health were particularly acute, with heat singled out by
these agencies as the biggest climate-related threat as global warming drives
ever-hotter European summers.

"We're seeing an increasing trend in the number of days with heat stress
across Europe and 2023 was no exception, with Europe seeing a record number
of days with extreme heat stress," said Rebecca Emerton, a climate scientist
at Copernicus.

For this study, Copernicus and WMO used the Universal Thermal Climate Index,
which measures the effect of the environment on the human body.

It takes into account not just high temperatures but also humidity, wind
speed, sunshine, and heat emitted by the surroundings.

The index has 10 different categories of heat and cold stress, with units of
degrees Celsius representing a 'feels-like' temperature.

Extreme heat stress "is equivalent to a feels-like temperature of more than
46 degrees Celsius, at which point it's imperative to take actions to avoid
health risks such as heat stroke", said Emerton.

- 'Extended summer' -

Prolonged exposure to heat stress is particularly dangerous for vulnerable
people such as the elderly or those with pre-existing health conditions.

The effect of heat is stronger in cities, the report said.

Twenty-three of the 30 worst heatwaves on record in Europe have occurred this
century and heat-related deaths have soared around 30 percent in the past 20
years, the report said.

2023 was not the hottest summer in Europe -- in fact, it was the fifth -- but
that doesn't mean it wasn't blazing.

Much of Europe sweltered from heatwaves during an "extended summer" between
June and September, Emerton said.

September was the warmest on record for Europe as a whole, she added.

On July 23, an unprecedented 13 percent of Europe was experiencing high
levels of heat stress, with southern Europe the worst affected.

The data on deaths in Europe from extreme heat in 2023 is not available yet.

But tens of thousands of people are estimated to have died due to heatwaves
during equally sweltering European summers in 2003, 2010 and 2022, the report
said.

"We see that there is excess mortality when we see such extreme heatwaves
like was the case in 2023," said Alvaro Silva, a climatologist from WMO.

"This increase in mortality... is affecting (the) big majority of European
regions. This is a big concern."

- Serious consequences -

Scientists agree that greenhouse gas emissions are warming the planet,
causing more intense and frequent extreme weather events.

Europe is warming twice as fast as the global average and heatwaves will
become longer and more powerful in future, the report said.

This -- coupled with ageing populations and more people moving to cities --
will have "serious consequences for public health", it added.

"Current heatwave interventions will soon be insufficient to deal with the
expected heat-related health burden."

2023 was the hottest year globally on record and oceans, which absorb 90
percent of excess heat produced by carbon dioxide emissions, also warmed to
new highs.

Average sea surface temperatures in Europe were the warmest on record, the
report said, with a severe marine heatwave in part of the Atlantic Ocean
described as "beyond extreme".

Glaciers in all parts of Europe saw a loss of ice, while Greece suffered the
largest wildfire in the history of the EU.

2023 was also one of Europe's wettest years, with major flooding affecting
1.6 million people, and storms another 550,000.

Emerton said that economic cost of these extreme events was 13.4 billion
euros ($14.3 billion) -- about 80 percent attributed to flooding.