France logs its hottest day ever — and Europe is roasting
43°C in western France, dozens dead (most by drowning) and 54 zones on red alert. The heatwave gripping Europe is no joke.
It’s hot, and then there’s this hot. On Tuesday the town of Les Herbiers, in western France, hit 43°C — the country’s hottest day since records began in 1947. And this wasn’t some southern town baking in the usual sun; it was the normally mild Atlantic west.
The grim part is the toll. French authorities count around 45 deaths since Thursday, 40 of them by drowning — mostly young people who jumped into unsupervised water to escape the furnace. Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu urged caution: a cool river looks like salvation, but cold water after hours in the sun can turn deadly fast.
France’s weather service put 54 areas on red alert, schools closed early, and the power grid strained as everyone reached for air conditioning — where it exists, because most French homes simply don’t have it.
Why it matters here
Because it’s the same heat dome that already rolled over the Iberian Peninsula. Portugal knows the script well: scorching days, maximum fire risk, and the temptation to cool off where you shouldn’t. The French lesson is simple and applies to Portugal as much as to Bordeaux — drink water, dodge the midday sun, and in the water always pick the spot with a lifeguard.
Illustrative · Photo: Clayton Anastácio / Pexels