More than 1,300 heat-related deaths across Europe since June 21, WHO chief says
ONP Summary
A severe heat wave beginning in mid-June has moved across Europe from west to east, setting multiple national temperature records with Germany reaching 41.7°C and neighboring countries exceeding 40°C, while resulting in over 1,300 documented excess deaths concentrated among people 65 and older. The extreme heat has caused widespread disruption to infrastructure and daily activities, triggered growing wildfire concerns, and extended into southeastern Europe and toward Ukraine. Climate experts attribute the unprecedented frequency and intensity of such events to human-induced global warming.
Progressive: Progressive outlets highlight the climate change dimension prominently and focus on the heat's disproportionate impact on vulnerable elderly populations, underscoring the human cost of climate-driven extremes.
Moderate: Centrist outlets provide comprehensive coverage of temperatures, geographic progression, death statistics, and scientific context, presenting the event as a significant public health and climate story.
Conservative: Conservative outlets report temperature records and death tolls while addressing climate change through WHO authority statements about the increasing frequency of extreme events.
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Temperatures broke records across Europe again on Sunday.
The head of the World Health Organization says more than 1,300 heat-related deaths have been recorded since June 21.
Leigh Kiniry has more from London. ...