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Summer 2025 already a cavalcade of climate extremes

    • A wildfire burns near Little Bear Lake in Saskatchewan, Canada, May 30, 2025.
    • A wildfire burns near Little Bear Lake in Saskatchewan, Canada, May 30, 2025. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Wed, Aug 6, 2025 · 06:59 AM

    [PARIS] Record heat, massive fires, deadly floods... August has barely begun, but the summer of 2025 is already marked by a cascade of destructive and deadly weather in the northern hemisphere.

    “Extreme temperatures and precipitation have become more intense and more frequent on a global scale,” says Sonia Seneviratne, a professor at ETH Zurich and member of the UN-mandated climate science advisory panel, the IPCC.

    “We are in the midst of climate change,” Fred Hattermann, a scientist at the Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research (PIK), told AFP.

    “The risk of extreme events has increased significantly,” he said, noting that 2024 was the first year in which the planet’s average surface temperature was 1.6 deg C above the preindustrial benchmark.

    That deceptively small jump makes a huge difference.

    Higher temperatures increase evaporation, so that more water is stored in the atmosphere. This, in turn, increases the risk of heavy rainfall and flooding.

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    “with every increment of temperature rise the risk of more and stronger extremes increases,” Hattermann added.

    50 deg C in the Gulf, Turkey

    Already in May, temperatures exceeded 50 deg C in the United Arab Emirates. On Aug 1, the thermometer hit 51.8 deg C, just under the all-time record of 52 deg C.

    Muslim pilgrims walk as water sprinklers spray water during the annual hajj pilgrimage in Mina, Saudi Arabia, June 7, 2025. PHOTO: REUTERS

    The entire Gulf region is suffocating: the Saudi capital Riyadh recorded temperatures of 44 deg C, while Kuwait frequently hit 50 deg C.

    As did Iraq, where air conditioning has become vulnerable to chronic power cuts, and water reserves are at their lowest level in years.

    Turkey saw the 50 deg C threshold exceeded for the first time: the town of Silopi on the border with Iraq and Syria reached 50.5 deg C on July 26.

    The country has experienced thousands of fires this summer amidst a severe drought.

    Pedestrians use their handheld fans on a hot day in Tokyo, Japan, Aug 5, 2025. PHOTO: AFP

    In Asia, meanwhile, Japan broke its all-time temperature record on Tuesday with 41.8 deg C in the city of Isesaki, north-west of Tokyo. The country’s iconic cherry trees, emblematic of the archipelago, are blooming earlier than ever due to the heat.

    Torrential rains in Hong Kong

    On Tuesday, Hong Kong saw the highest rainfall total for August in more than 140 years of record-keeping: 35.5 cm in a single day.

    Workers work to remove collapsed scaffolding brought down by strong winds and heavy rain in Hong Kong after Typhoon Wipha skirted along China’s southern coast, July 20, 2025. PHOTO: AFP

    On mainland China, a week earlier, severe weather killed at least 44 people and left nine missing in rural districts north of Beijing.

    Pakistan floods, Finland heat

    266 people, nearly half of them children, have already lost their lives in Pakistan due to torrential rains sweeping across the country.

    The 2025 monsoon, which started early, was described as “unusual” by authorities. Punjab, Pakistan’s most populous province, recorded 73 per cent more rainfall in July than in 2024.

    People come to Scandinavia to seek cooler climes, but since July Norway, Sweden and Finland have experienced sustained temperatures more typical of the Mediterranean.

    People sunbathing at Ounaskoski beach at the Arctic Circle in Rovaniemi, Finland, July 23, 2025. PHOTO: AFP

    Aug 3 marked the end of a 22-day period with temperatures above 30 deg C in Finland: a record.

    In Rovaniemi, a Finnish city north of the Arctic Circle, temperatures reached 30 deg C, higher than in southern Europe at the same time.

    Mega-fires in Canada

    Canada is experiencing one of the worst forest fire seasons on record, amplified by drought and above-normal temperatures.

    Other parts of the world are also burning, from Scotland to Arizona and Greece.

    According to the European Union’s Copernicus weather and climate observatory, total smoke and greenhouse gas emissions since the beginning of summer in the northern hemisphere are among the highest ever recorded. AFP

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