But on the Mediterranean islands of Sicily and Sardinia they’re expected to climb to 48C in the coming days, and could even break the continent‘s record of 48.8C set in August 2021.
And those are just air temperatures. New data shows the ground is even hotter.
The European Space Agency’s heat-sensing satellite Copernicus detected land surface temperatures have already exceeded 45C across large areas of Italy (shown as dark red on ESA’s animation).
Along the eastern slopes of Mount Etna, the volcano on Sicily, the sun-baked earth passed 50C on 9 and 10 July.
And that was in the late morning. The temperature would have been even higher in the afternoon – and likely hotter still as the heatwave has intensified through the week.
That’s the effect of the rising background temperature from climate change, up around 1.2C since pre-industrial times, and extreme weather patterns becoming locked in place.
Higher-than-normal water temperatures in the Mediterranean are also pumping additional heat into the surrounding air, like an enormous radiator.
This year is on track to be a scorcher. Preliminary data from satellites suggests the Earth had its hottest three days on record earlier this month.
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The impact of the El Nino weather pattern in the Pacific, which results in extra heat being released by the ocean into the atmosphere, has yet to ripple around the planet.
But it will over the coming months and it’s expected to temporarily add another 0.2C to the global background temperature.