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Environment

June heatwave may have killed around 20,000 people in Europe

It will be some months before the true toll of Europe's worst-ever heatwave is confirmed, but researchers can estimate a death count based on how many people died in Europe during previous hot periods

By Michael Le Page

2 July 2026

The June heatwave is estimated to have killed more than 5000 people in France

Laurent EMMANUEL / AFP via Getty Images

贰耻谤辞辫别鈥檚 most extreme heatwave so far may have killed between 17,000 and 25,000 people, according to an early estimate based on past deaths from heat in the region.

鈥淭hese numbers are preliminary,鈥 says at Indiana University. 鈥淏ut they highlight the need for rapid adaptation investments to avoid these impacts in the future.鈥

Callahan鈥檚 estimate is based on . 鈥淲e’re taking data on temperature and mortality across Europe, and we are correlating how high temperatures relate to excess mortality rates,鈥 says Callahan. 鈥淲e then use that relationship to infer how a given heatwave affects mortality over a region like Europe.鈥

Callahan鈥檚 conclusion is that the heatwave in Europe from 22 to 28 June 2026 killed approximately 20,390 people, including 5210 in France, 4543 in Germany, 3163 in Spain, 2709 in Germany and 862 in the UK. These numbers are much higher than the direct counts announced so far, but this isn’t surprising because it takes time for data on deaths to be collected and analysed.

鈥淭his figure is a modelled estimate rather than a final count, and it will be some months before the true toll is confirmed, in part because heat rarely appears on a death certificate,鈥 says at the University of Warwick in the UK.

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For instance, on 28 June, the head of the World 91色情片 Organization, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, said so far. This number is largely based on reporting around 1000 more deaths in the country than expected from 24 to 26 June.

However, that statement made it clear that this number is based on a computerised death certificate system that is far from complete. It records 80 per cent of hospital deaths, 45 per cent of deaths in long-term care facilities and 25 per cent of deaths at home. 鈥淢ortality will consequently be higher than these initial figures suggest,鈥 the statement said.

Even so, other experts think Callahan may have overestimated the numbers. 鈥淭wenty-thousand for a single week seems very large,鈥 says at the University of Bristol in the UK. 鈥淲e’d have to look into details of the modelling to be more sure.鈥

While Callahan鈥檚 method is sound, the main issue is that he used data from 2015 to 2019 to calculate the relationship between heat and deaths, says at Pozna艅 University of Medical Sciences in Poland. People may now be less vulnerable due to ongoing adaptations, such as increased access to air conditioning, . Walkowiak鈥檚 back-of-the-envelope calculation is that if this is taken into account, the actual number of deaths would be around 15,000.

Callahan is sticking to his guns. 鈥淲e don’t have very strong evidence that the relationship between temperature and mortality dramatically changed over time,鈥 he says. 鈥淪o it’s not obvious it’s different now than it was 10 years ago.鈥

鈥淚n general, we find that our sort of broader statistical estimates give higher numbers than direct reporting on the ground, because that direct reporting can often miss people who die from heat where it’s not obvious that heat was the cause,鈥 he says.

On the flip side, Walkowiak says that Callahan hasn鈥檛 taken into account the fact that heatwaves of the same temperature are more deadly in early summer than in late summer. 鈥淚n late summer, part of the especially vulnerable population is already long gone,鈥 he says.

Mitchell also says the kind of approach used by Callahan also counts only the immediate deaths. There can be longer-term impacts, such as more deaths from domestic violence, suicides and kidney failure. 鈥淭he impacts of heat on health vary a lot across timescales,鈥 he says.

What matters most is avoiding further deaths as the planet warms further and heat becomes more extreme, says Nunes. 鈥淭he signal is clear: heat is now the deadliest weather hazard we face, and the majority of these deaths are preventable,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e can now forecast these events with considerable accuracy; what we have not done is build the systems, across health, housing, social care and transport, for example, that translate an accurate forecast into actual protection. Adaptation is not keeping pace with the risk.鈥

Reference:

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