The severe heat wave in America and Europe has killed more than 20 people, thousands of acres of forests have caught fire
Train tracks are warping, tracks are melting and spreading, UK temperature exceeds 40 degrees Celsius for the first time
Due to the continuous increase in the intensity of heat in Europe and America, the number of people killed by the heat in Spain and Portugal has increased to 2000, while efforts are being made to control the forest fires. Dozens of houses were also engulfed by it.
Thousands of people have been evacuated to safer places in France, Spain and Portugal.
According to reports, temperatures in the UK have risen above 40 degrees Celsius for the first time in history, with 13 deaths recorded from this record heat.
There have been reports of drowning of 5 people among those who turned to lakes and rivers to save themselves from the heat.
A researcher from the Faculty of Sciences of the University of Lisbon said that the data showed that most of the people who died due to heat waves were the elderly. Working trains have also been answered.
According to the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), the heat wave has already reached its peak in Europe, but temperatures could remain above average for another week at a time when the world average Temperatures have risen by just over one centigrade from what many parts of the world saw before industrialization.
According to the UN's climate science body, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the world is now going through its hottest period in 125,000 years. Temperatures soared above 40 degrees Celsius, and forest fires wreaked havoc in many countries.
According to the British Broadcasting Corporation, after the hottest night recorded in Great Britain, the Meteorological Department said that a new high temperature was recorded in Co Ningsby in East England of 40.3 degrees Celsius. The previous record was broken, which was recorded in Cambridge in 2019.
A fire broke out in grasslands on the outskirts of London.
Farm buildings, houses and garages were engulfed in flames, forcing the evacuation of 14 people. Black clouds of smoke rose into the air and within an hour they spread to our house and all our cars were burnt. will
Heat waves are increasing and will continue until at least the 2060s, even if we manage to slow rising temperatures, the head of the UN's World Meteorological Organization, Petri Talas, told reporters in Geneva.
The high temperatures prompted an unusual red alert across much of England, with some rail lines closed as a precaution and schools closed in some areas as roads and runways thawed and train tracks derailed.
Concerned Transport Secretary Grantships admitted that much of Britain's infrastructure was not built for these temperatures.
A second heat wave that has gripped parts of Europe in recent weeks has fueled dangerous wildfires in France, Greece, Portugal and Spain, destroying large tracts of land.
Greek authorities have evacuated eight villages north of Athens as they try to put out the two fires that have so far burned more than 42,000 acres of forest near Don Do Pelat, and in just 24 hours.
Meanwhile, there were reports of fires in 39 places across the country. It has been almost 10 days since the recent heat wave in Spain and there were fires in more than a dozen places on Tuesday.
The Prime Minister of Spain, Pedro Sanchez, after visiting the badly affected area, said that the environmental crisis is deadly. Several people have died due to fires in the country in recent days.
Two people have been killed and nearly 60 injured in wildfires in Portugal, while authorities in the Netherlands put salt on roads in some areas to prevent the asphalt from melting. Coins and vehicles are not damaged by weight.
In Amsterdam, council officials sprayed canal bridges with water to keep them cool so their steel structures wouldn't expand due to the heat in their metal structures, and the bridges couldn't open to let boats through.
Brussels, in particular, took the unusual decision on Tuesday to offer free entry to over-65s to avoid the heat.
Two nuclear reactors near Antwerp have more than halved their power output to lower the temperature of water discharged into nearby rivers amid fears of a severe summer drought in Germany.
The president of the German Farmers' Association has warned of a big deficit in food production. Across the Atlantic, the situation in the United States remains the same, where the heat has engulfed many areas.
The U.S. Weather Service is reporting that citizens will have to endure extreme temperatures into next week.
According to the National Weather Service, more than 100 million people are living under an excessive warning or heat advisory this week. The grid operator has predicted that electricity use is expected to see a record-breaking increase again this week as homes and businesses increase the use of their air conditioners.
The New York City Fire Department has opened cooling centers in libraries, community centers and other city buildings for people who don't have easy access to air conditioning.
In Stovepipe Wells, one of the coldest areas, temperatures were expected to reach 48 degrees on Tuesday, while temperatures in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma City, were forecast to reach 43 degrees Celsius. Stepping into 'Dragon's Breath'.
