Nature
2023.10.03 14:08 GMT+8

Spain's heatwave breaks October records

Updated 2023.10.03 14:08 GMT+8
CGTN

Temperatures across Spain have hit record highs for October with the unseasonable heat likely to last over a week, the country's State Meteorological Agency AEMET said Monday. 

High temperatures across Spain resulted in three "record days of heat" that began on Friday with the mercury peaking on Sunday at 38.2 degrees Celsius in the southern town of Montoro near Cordoba, it said. 

The previous October record was set in 2014, when the mercury hit 37.5 degrees Celsius in the southern town of Marbella.

"On October 1, it reached an all-time high for this time of year in practically the entire Iberian Peninsula," it said on the social media platform X, formerly Twitter, saying that nearly 40 percent of its weather stations had registered a temperature of 32 degrees Celsius or higher. 

The situation was similar on Monday, with the southern city of Seville reaching 38.1 degrees Celsius, AEMET figures showed.

"But the most extraordinary thing is that there are still quite a few unseasonably warm days left. We could have up to 10 more days of record heat," it said. 

Although it has become accustomed to soaring summer temperatures, notably in the south, Spain has experienced an uptick in longer and hotter heat waves, experts say. 

Spain, which had its hottest year on record in 2022, has been in the grip of successive heat waves this year, which got off to an unusually early start in April, exacerbating an ongoing drought. 

Experts say the recurring heat waves, which have been getting longer and more intense, are a consequence of climate change. 

The Iberian Peninsula is bearing the brunt of climate change in Europe, with droughts and wildfires becoming more and more common. 

(Cover: A passer-by photograph the thermometer that marks 50 degrees Celsius, Seville, Spain, June 26, 2023. /CFP)

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Source(s): AFP
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