A firefighting plane dropping water over a wildfire near Athens, Greece Costas Baltas/Anadolu via Getty Images
An intense heatwave in June and July killed 2300 people across London and 11 other European cities, a death toll that was nearly tripled by climate change. While it can take months to determine the impact of climate change on heat deaths, scientists have now developed a method to do this quickly.
A “heat dome” of high atmospheric pressure brought extreme heat to western and central Europe in late June, with temperatures reaching nearly 35˚C in London, 40˚C in and 46˚C in parts of and . Wildfires blazed across the Mediterranean, nuclear reactors were shut down in Switzerland and France, and Italian regions outdoor labour during the hottest parts of the day after a construction worker died.
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Researchers at the World Weather Attribution network used weather data to estimate how intense the heatwave would have been without climate change, then compared this with what actually happened. They combined their rapid attribution finding with research by at team at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine that has graphed the relationship between daily temperature and excess deaths in European cities. The researchers applied this curve to real-world temperatures and those calculated for a non-warming world to find the death toll of climate change during this heatwave.
They estimated that 2300 people died from heat between 23 June and 2 July in Athens, Barcelona, Budapest, Frankfurt, Lisbon, London, Madrid, Milan, Paris, Rome, Sassari, Italy, and Zagreb, Croatia. The that the heatwave would have killed 700 people even in a cooler world. But because climate change amplified temperatures by up to 4˚C, an additional 1500 people died. Heat is the deadliest type of extreme weather, but it is a silent killer that aggravates existing illnesses and often isn’t recorded on death certificates.
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This is the first study to calculate climate-related deaths immediately after a heatwave. In London, climate change was responsible for 171 of 263 fatalities. “That, for me, makes [climate change] more real,” says team member at Imperial College London. “We need policy-makers to take action.”
“Now, it’s closer to dangerous heat for more people,” says team member , also at Imperial College London. Eighty-eight percent of those killed were aged 65 or over, the most vulnerable group.
The research may be underestimating the deaths because it relies on mortality data from a cooler past, according to at the University of Washington in Seattle.
“We don’t know what happens when you get to these really extreme temperatures,” she says.
While governments are now giving more heatwave warnings, response plans and infrastructure still need improvement. Milan, the hardest-hit city with 499 deaths, suffers from high air pollution, which can be worsened by heat. Madrid, where 90 per cent of deaths were due to climate change, lacks greenery to temper the urban heat island effect.
And in London, many buildings are poorly ventilated. For now, the city could offer drinking water in London Underground stations and ban non-essential car travel during heatwaves, says Otto. Teachers and officials should also tell people about heat risk. “Even if you think you are invincible, you’re not,” she says.



