Europe’s Deadliest Spring on Record — And a Push to Make Climate Change a Global Health Emergency
101 deaths in Spain in a single month. Temperature records shattered across seven nations. A WHO commission calling for the world’s highest health alert. Here is what happened — and what it means for everyone.
Spain — May 2026
(record for May)
Spring Temperature
(Kew Gardens, May 26)
in Portugal
during May 2026
in Europe in 2024
(Lancet Countdown)
Across Europe
(2015–2024 vs. baseline)
Per Year by 2050
Without Adaptation
Spain’s Health Ministry released its May 2026 data and the number had no precedent: 101 people died from heat in a single month — the highest ever recorded for May since systematic tracking began in 2015. Across the UK, France, Portugal, Germany, the Netherlands, and Ireland, temperature records set over decades broke in a single afternoon. Parts of the UK hit 35.1°C in late May. Portugal reached 40.3°C. Catalonia, Spain, saw 39.5°C — a new all-time May record for the region. All of this happened not in August, but in late spring.
These temperatures arrived 10 to 15 degrees Celsius above seasonal norms. A heat dome had settled over Western Europe and refused to move for days.
As the deaths mounted, a high-level commission convened by the World Health Organization’s European office was making an extraordinary demand: that the WHO formally classify climate change as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern — the same category used for COVID-19. The Lancet Countdown’s 2026 Europe report, developed by 65 experts across 46 institutions, had already confirmed that heat-attributable deaths in Europe reached an estimated 62,000 in 2024. Without adaptation, that number is projected to more than double — to 120,000 annually — by 2050.
How It Unfolded
Where Records Were Broken
Click any marker to see temperature records and reported deaths by country during the May–June 2026 heatwave.
Seven Countries, One Heat Dome, Hundreds of Deaths
The heat dome that settled over Western Europe from May 24 was driven by an unusually strong high-pressure system trapping warm air and blocking the cooler Atlantic flows that typically moderate spring temperatures. In France, the national average temperature on May 26 reached 24.9°C — the hottest May mean on record. The UK’s Met Office recorded 34.8°C at Kew Gardens on May 25, a springtime record. The following day, that record was broken at 35.1°C at the same station. Portugal peaked at 40.3°C. In Spain’s Catalonia, the station at Vinebre recorded 39.5°C — the highest May temperature in the region’s history. The Netherlands logged its hottest May 26 on record at 30.4°C in De Bilt, surpassing the 2005 figure of 29.1°C.
Spain’s Health Ministry counted 101 heat-related deaths in May — a number without precedent since national heat tracking began in 2015, announced officially on June 3, 2026. In France, authorities confirmed seven deaths: five drownings across various waterways and two fatalities during outdoor sporting events. The UK reported 15 deaths linked to the heat by the end of the heatwave — a toll that included several teenagers, a 72-year-old woman, and adults who died in separate water incidents.
“This latest heatwave in Europe is a brutal reminder of the spiraling impacts of the climate crisis, both human and economic. The science is clear that human-induced climate change is making these heatwaves more frequent and extreme. Protecting human lives, businesses and economies from extreme heat and the many other soaring costs of climate change is core business for every nation, and it starts with kicking the fossil fuel addiction much faster.”
The Demand for the World’s Highest Health Alert
On May 17 — weeks before the heat dome arrived — the Pan-European Commission on Climate and Health published its formal Call to Action through WHO Europe. The Commission, chaired by former Icelandic Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir, brings together 13 former heads of government, ministers, and civil society leaders from across WHO Europe’s 53-member region. Its chief scientific adviser is Professor Sir Andrew Haines of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.
The Commission’s central demand: that the WHO classify climate change as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. This is the same designation previously applied to COVID-19 and mpox — the WHO’s highest level of global health alert. The Commission argues that the scale and trajectory of climate-linked deaths, disease spread, food insecurity, and extreme weather now meet the criteria for this classification.
WHO Regional Director for Europe, Dr. Hans Henri P. Kluge, framed the core problem plainly: “Climate change is a security threat, a health emergency and an economic time bomb, all rolled into one.”
What Leaders and Scientists Are Saying
Climate change is a security threat, a health emergency and an economic time bomb, all rolled into one.
This latest heatwave in Europe is a brutal reminder of the spiraling impacts of the climate crisis, both human and economic.
The climate crisis is a threat to our safety and security, social cohesion, human rights and health.
Climate change is already impacting health across the region through multiple pathways. But climate adaptation and mitigation actions provide opportunities to protect and promote health.
What the Research Found
Key findings from the 2026 Lancet Countdown Europe Report — 65 experts, 46 institutions, 43 tracked indicators — and the World Health Organization Europe.
The Workers Nobody Is Talking About
While record temperatures draw attention, a gap in public discussion involves the people who work in the heat daily. According to European climate health data, 23% of all EU workers are exposed to high temperatures for at least a quarter of their working hours. In agriculture and industry, that figure is 36%. In construction, 38%. Between 800,000 and one million seasonal outdoor workers — the majority of them migrants — are hired across European agriculture each year. These workers carry the greatest physical risk with the least institutional protection. European workers collectively lost an average of 24 working hours per year between 2000 and 2023 due to heat exposure. Heatwaves currently cost the global economy roughly 1% of GDP annually — and that figure grows each year. The full economic weight of pollution and extreme weather falls hardest on lower-income workers and economies.
Heat and the Mind
Extreme heat affects more than body temperature. Sustained high temperatures are consistently linked to disrupted sleep, heightened irritability, anxiety, and depression. Research published in Nature Human Behaviour in 2026 connects climate stress and social health in ways that extend well beyond physical illness. Climate anxiety — documented worry about future environmental conditions — is a growing burden, particularly among people under 35. Building mental resilience during environmental stress is increasingly part of the public health response.
The Ocean Current Underneath It All
One dimension of Europe’s heat that rarely appears in general coverage is the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation — the ocean current system that carries warm water northward and has long moderated European temperatures. Scientists flagged on June 9, 2026, that AMOC monitoring is now at risk. Research published this year finds the circulation is closer to a critical weakening point than earlier models assumed. The connection to European heat is counterintuitive but documented: a weakening AMOC creates pressure distribution patterns that draw warm air northward from the south into Europe during summer, intensifying heat extremes. The same disruption that threatens to eventually cool Europe dramatically in the longer term may be making its summers hotter right now.
This Has Happened Before — Each Time Worse
Europe’s 2003 heatwave killed an estimated 70,000 people, with France alone losing approximately 15,000. That disaster drove the creation of formal national heat-health plans. The 2022 European summer killed more than 61,000. The 2025 summer added more. In 2026, the lethal season started in May. More than 20 European countries now have Heat–Health Action Plans, per WHO Europe’s updated June 2 guidance — but coverage remains uneven, and only around one in five European countries includes climate change in health professional training. The next generation of doctors, nurses, and public health workers across most of Europe is not being formally educated in climate-driven illness.
Fossil fuel combustion — the primary driver of the warming behind these events — is also directly responsible for approximately 600,000 premature deaths per year in Europe through air pollution. Governments continue to subsidize these fuels while their health systems absorb the costs. The Pan-European Commission’s 17 recommendations — spanning health security, health system transformation, local action, and economic reform — address this directly. Where climate and health funding priorities intersect, the trade-offs have real and immediate consequences for every national budget.
The long-term picture is documented: without adaptation, 120,000 people could die annually from heat in Europe by 2050. Food security is declining in regions dependent on outdoor agriculture, with over one million additional people already affected by climate-related food insecurity. Water systems are also under stress — as this connected analysis on the global water crisis covers in detail.
Source: Eurofound / European Climate and Health Observatory
🌡️ What You Can Do Right Now
WHO Europe’s updated guidance and verified expert recommendations for staying safe during extreme heat
The peak danger window in affected regions is roughly noon to 6pm. Avoid strenuous activity during this period.
- Schedule errands, exercise, and outdoor work for early morning or after sunset
- Stay in shaded areas when outdoors; never leave children, elderly relatives, or pets in parked vehicles
- If possible, spend 2–3 hours in an air-conditioned space — shopping centers, libraries, or public cooling centers
- Close blinds, curtains, and shutters on sun-facing windows during daylight hours
- Open windows and doors at night once outdoor air cools below indoor temperature
- Turn off unused electrical devices — they generate additional heat
- Avoid using the oven; opt for cold meals, a microwave, or eating out during peak heat
- Hang damp, light-colored sheets over windows for added cooling effect
Drink water steadily throughout the day — not only when thirsty. Thirst is a late sign of dehydration during extreme heat.
- Avoid alcohol, sugary, and caffeinated beverages — all accelerate dehydration
- Eat foods with high water content: cucumber, watermelon, tomatoes, oranges
- Take cool (not ice-cold) showers or baths
- Wear light-colored, loose-fitting clothing and use lightweight bedding
People who die in heatwaves are most often elderly individuals living alone, very young children, people with chronic illness, and outdoor workers.
- Check on elderly neighbors and relatives — call or visit daily during heat alerts
- Keep infants and young children cool and hydrated; they cannot self-regulate temperature as effectively
- Outdoor workers should schedule hard physical labor before 10am, wear light-colored clothing, and rest in shade frequently
- Know the warning signs of heatstroke: confusion, loss of consciousness, hot dry skin, absence of sweating — call emergency services immediately
Extreme heat disrupts sleep, elevates anxiety, and worsens mood. These are documented physiological responses, not overreactions.
- Keep bedrooms as cool as possible for sleep quality — fans, damp cloths, and cross-ventilation help significantly
- Limit climate-related news consumption if it causes sustained anxiety
- Stay socially connected — isolation during heat emergencies compounds mental stress
- Climate anxiety is real and increasingly documented; speaking to a health professional is a valid and practical option
What This Article Covered
Spain’s Health Ministry recorded 101 heat deaths in May 2026 — the highest total for that month since tracking began in 2015. The UK registered its highest springtime temperature in recorded history at 35.1°C. Portugal reached 40.3°C. France, Germany, the Netherlands, and Ireland all broke spring temperature records. A heat dome drove temperatures 10 to 15 degrees Celsius above seasonal norms across seven nations simultaneously.
The Pan-European Commission on Climate and Health — chaired by former Icelandic Prime Minister Katrín Jakobsdóttir and convened by WHO Europe — published its Call to Action in May 2026, requesting that the WHO classify climate change as a Public Health Emergency of International Concern. The Commission’s recommendations were peer-reviewed and published in The Lancet. The Lancet Countdown 2026 Europe report, developed by 65 experts across 46 institutions, estimated 62,000 heat-attributable deaths in Europe in 2024, a 297% rise in dengue risk, and a projection of 120,000 annual heat deaths by 2050 without adaptation. WHO Europe documented the heatwave response and updated its Heat–Health Action Plan guidance on June 2, 2026. These are the facts as they stand on June 9, 2026.
Further reading on connected subjects: the economic cost of pollution, the global water and food security crisis, and the mental health dimension of environmental stress.
