Climate change is driving the extreme heat baking France’s Olympics
We also look at other recent record-breaking temps and explain what the heat index is
By Nikk Ogasa
Il fait trop chaud. The Paris Olympics officially opened on July 26, just in time for athletes to compete in a hellish heat wave.
Last week, Olympians in the French capital faced daytime temperatures reaching 35° Celsius (95° Fahrenheit), and in southern France temperatures climbed up to 40° C (104° F). Other countries in the Mediterranean region also felt the heat wave. In Spain, the city of Barcelona recorded its highest-ever temperature — 40° C — on July 31. And in Italy, the sweltering weather helped fuel a wildfire in the Monte Mario natural reserve in Rome.
This extreme heat would not have happened without climate change, researchers from the World Weather Attribution Network reported on July 31. “If the atmosphere wasn’t overloaded with emissions from burning fossil fuel, Paris would have been about 3 [degrees] C cooler and much safer for sport,” said climatologist Friederike Otto of the Imperial College London in a statement.
Other parts of the world sweltered, too. In California, Death Valley set the record for the hottest month ever recorded on Earth, averaging 42.5° C (108.5° F) across July. A major heat dome also settled in over the southern United States (SN: 6/21/24). The extreme heat swept across much of the country by the end of the week, with the National Weather Service placing more than 150 million people under extreme heat advisories on August 1. Antarctica’s eastern region also experienced a major heat wave, with ground temperatures rising beyond 28° C.