Southern Europe continues to endure a punishing heatwave on June 30, 2025, with temperatures exceeding 40°C across Spain, Italy, Greece, and Portugal, marking the region’s third consecutive summer of extreme heat.
The heatwave, driven by a high-pressure system from North Africa, has caused 15 deaths, including 7 in Greece and 5 in Italy, and triggered wildfires that destroyed 10,000 hectares in Andalusia and Sicily. Spain’s AEMET reported temperatures hitting 43°C in Seville, while Athens recorded 42°C, overwhelming cooling centers serving 50,000 residents. The region’s 200 million inhabitants face water shortages, with Portugal’s reservoirs at 30% capacity, threatening 20% of its agricultural output.
Hospitals in Rome and Lisbon report a 25% surge in heatstroke cases, with 1,000 hospitalizations daily. The heatwave, costing €2 billion in damages, has disrupted tourism, with 10% fewer visitors to Greece’s Acropolis.
Governments have deployed 5,000 firefighters and €500 million in emergency funds, but climate experts warn of a 50% increase in such events by 2030 due to global warming’s 1.5°C threshold breach. Posts on X reflect public frustration, with 70% of users demanding EU action on emissions, as Southern Europe braces for another week of unrelenting heat.