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  "path": "/news/2003065/mini-version-of-hell-heat-dome-over-europe-scorches-uk-france-spain",
  "publishedAt": "2026-05-25T18:48:25.000Z",
  "site": "https://www.dawn.com",
  "tags": [
    "World"
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  "textContent": "Temperatures hit record highs for May in the United Kingdom and France on Monday, as forecasters warned of a prolonged period of extreme heat across Europe throughout the week.\n\nA so-called “heat dome” of warm air from northern Africa trapped under a high-pressure system over western Europe is behind the high temperatures not usually seen until high summer.\n\nTemperatures in Spain were expected to peak later this week at 38°C, while parts of Italy imposed restrictions on working outdoors.\n\nIn the UK, the Met Office weather agency said it was the hottest May day on record, with temperatures hitting 34.8°C at Kew Gardens, southwest London – a full two degrees above the previous high.\n\n“This heat would be exceptional in the UK even in mid-summer, let alone May,” it said on X.\n\n“The weather here, it’s like a mini version of hell. It’s boiling. It’s like really hot,” said 10-year-old Liza Nizari on a visit to London, where temperatures normally average about 17°C or 18C at this time of year.\n\nLindy Brand-Daloze, a 66-year-old Australian administrator who has been living in London for 12 years, said: “It’s warm, but it’s climate change, isn’t it? So, you know, (we have) probably got to get used to this.”\n\nScientists say human-induced climate change is making extreme weather events like heatwaves, droughts and floods more intense, resulting in temperature records being broken more frequently.\n\nMet Office meteorologist Greg Dewhurst told _AFP_ the increase in extreme temperatures was “a good indication of climate change in action” and more likely to become “the new norm”.\n\nClimate advisers last week warned the UK government that the country was “built for a climate that no longer exists” and urged it to adapt infrastructure like schools and hospitals for a warming planet.\n\nIn 2022, temperatures in the UK soared above 40°C for the first time since records began.\n\n## Heatwave alert\n\nAcross the Channel, weather agency Meteo-France said “dozens” of temperature records were broken in several French cities, as it placed eight western regions under a heatwave alert.\n\nThe exceptionally high temperatures were expected to last until the weekend.\n\nOn Monday, the western town of Bergerac recorded a high of 34.7°C, with the cities of Nantes and Angers not far behind.\n\nOn Tuesday, heat of between 32°C and 35°C was expected across much of the western region of Brittany, “with peaks of 36° or even 37°C expected in the south of the country”, Meteo-France said.\n\nFrench Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu was to hold a meeting Thursday with key ministers to go over government preparations for the heatwave.\n\nThe capital, Paris, on Saturday notched up its first temperature above 30°C of the year, hitting 31.9°C.\n\nOn Sunday, a man died during a 10-kilometre running race in Paris, civil defence services said, while 10 more had to be taken to hospital in critical condition after a race in the capital’s suburb of Maisons-Alfort, the authorities said.\n\nA 28-year-old woman also died of heatstroke at an indoor athletics meeting in the eastern Rhone region.\n\n## Outdoor work restricted\n\nIn Spain, the State Meteorological Agency (Aemet) warned the “extraordinarily high temperatures for this time of year” will continue across the country all week, except in the Canary Islands, in the Atlantic Ocean, off the northwest coast of Africa.\n\n“Widespread tropical nights” are also forecast in southwestern Spain from Wednesday, with temperatures peaking from Wednesday to Friday at between 36°C and 38°C, it wrote on X.\n\nFarther east, Italy’s Lazio region, which includes Rome, on Monday approved rules limiting work in conditions “with prolonged exposure in the sun” between 12pm and 4pm.\n\nThe measures apply, for example, to farms, construction sites and in the logistics sector and apply until September 15.\n\nSimilar rules had been put in place last year but only from May 30.",
  "title": "'Mini version of hell': Heat dome over Europe scorches UK, France, Spain"
}