France records hottest temperature

Funmilayo Ayanwusi
2 Min Read

France recorded its all-time hottest temperature of 44.3 degrees Celsius (111.7 degrees Fahrenheit) on Friday as the country and much of Europe basked in an early summer heatwave, state weather forecaster Meteo-France said.

The temperature was recorded in the southeastern town of Carpentras and beat the previous record for France of 44.1 degrees Celsius recorded in Saint-Christol-les-Ales and Conqueyrac during the notorious August 2003 heatwave, Meteo-France told AFP.

Meteo-France forecaster Etienne Kapikian said it was โ€œvery probableโ€ that the record would be beaten again Friday as it was still relatively early in the day.

โ€œ(The temperature) will continue to climb and, in some places, we could pass 44 degrees Celsius,โ€ he said.

The heatwave is also being felt in Spain, killing several persons, including a 17-year-old farm worker.

The Spanish teenager felt dizzy while helping harvest wheat in the southern Andalusia region.

After a dip in a swimming pool to cool off, he collapsed with convulsions and was rushed to hospital in the town of Cordoba where he later died, the regional government said.

Elsewhere in Spain, a 93-year-old man collapsed and died on the street in the northern city of Valladolid, police said, who gave heatstroke as the cause of death.

Heat-related deaths have also been reported in Italy, France, and Germany, mainly among the elderly.

NAN

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