2006 European heat wave


The 2006 European heat wave was a period of exceptionally hot weather that arrived at the end of June 2006 in certain European countries. The United Kingdom, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Luxembourg, Italy, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, Germany and western parts of Russia were most affected. Several records were broken. In the Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Ireland and the United Kingdom, July 2006 was the warmest month since official measurements began.

Country-by-country

Belgium

experienced two heat waves in July 2006. Before 1990 a heat wave occurred about once every 8 years, but during the last decade the country averages one heat wave per year. On 19 July 2006, temperatures throughout the entire country rose to, making it the hottest July day in almost 60 years. The highest temperatures were recorded at the stations of Kleine Brogel and Genk, which measured and, respectively.
There were 36 consecutive days of temperatures above where the heat wave lasted for 34 days straight. In the rest of the country, the second heat wave lasted for 17 days.
July 2006 became the warmest month in Belgian history, with an all-time high mean temperature of.

United Kingdom

At 14:32 BST on Wednesday, 19 July 2006, it was confirmed that had been recorded at Wisley, Surrey. This confirmed that the period of prolonged warm weather was a true heat wave. However, despite some predictions, the United Kingdom's all-time temperature high of attained at Faversham, Kent, on 10 August 2003 was not reached. Whilst a disputed was recorded at Wisley Airfield on 18 July, this figure has never been accepted and the figure of from 19 July is the highest acceptable value. This figure is generally deemed to be erroneous and it has been suggested that the recorded temperature was in fact. Another theory is that the record on 18 July 2006 was recorded in the sunshine, not in standard 'shaded' areas. Similar temperatures were recorded in the sunshine during a brief heatwave at Wimbledon on 1 July 2015. The heatwave even warmed the normally cool and wet Scottish summer, with Glasgow having a July high of and low of, which made it the warmest month on record. Because of the northerly location and marine nature, it was not a heat wave in a general sense, but rather unusually warm weather.
Drought was an issue in many parts of the United Kingdom after a very dry winter. There was warning of drought occurring from the early months of 2006. Following the dry winter, with extreme temperatures occurring in the country and little rain, increasing strain was put on water supplies, and hose-pipe bans were issued in many counties. The Environment Agency claimed that the UK may have had the most severe drought in 100 years.
Some power cuts also occurred, some after lightning strikes and some due to large amounts of electricity used by air conditioners. In Central London on 27 July 2006 a series of power cuts hit Piccadilly Circus, Regent Street, Turner Broadcasting UK and Oxford Circus causing the closure of shops and businesses, when pre-existing faults were worsened by heavy demand.
The Met Office confirmed that July 2006 was the warmest July, as well as the warmest single month, overall, across the UK, and a number of regional records were also broken.
The tarmac on some roads melted in England, requiring application of crushed rock dust.

Germany

In Germany most of the July temperature average records were broken. In Mannheim/Ludwigshafen a July average of was recorded, which means a temperature anomaly of, which is a new record for a monthly average in Germany. In Berlin an average temperature of was recorded. Such numbers were recorded all over Germany. The biggest problem was the precipitation, which mostly fell in intense thunderstorms. At least 20 people died in this heatwave.

Denmark

experienced the warmest July ever with an average temperature of, breaking a record of set in 1994. It was the second-warmest month ever, behind August 1997 at. It was also the sunniest July ever, and the second-sunniest ever, at 321 hours. In fact, the previous July record was 290 hours. Since Denmark escaped the extremes seen further south, it is now known as one of the best summer months in history.

France

High temperatures in France destroyed many crops, just days before the harvest period, while French officials said at least 40 people were confirmed to have been killed by the heat wave directly. Temperatures as high as were recorded in Paris during the heatwave. July 2006 was in many regions the warmest July ever recorded. In many regions weather was particularly stormy. In Nice, the all-time high temperature record was beaten with a recorded on 1 August.

Ireland

was affected from the heat wave from the start of June, and the warm weather continued until the end of July.
Temperatures were well above average for both months. The highest recorded in June was at Ardfert, County Kerry on 9 June. In Kilkenny, County Kilkenny, there were 29 consecutive days in July with temperatures over, and nine of these days had temperatures over. July 2006 was the warmest July in Ireland since records began. By the end of July, temperatures returned to average figures.
On 18 July, a temperature of was recorded in Birr, County Offaly; the same day, was recorded at Kilkenny Castle, County Kilkenny and Shannon Airport, County Clare. However, temperatures again rose to at Casement Aerodrome, Dublin; and at Elphin, County Roscommon on the 19 July – this is the warmest temperature recorded in Ireland since 1976. Temperatures over are rare in Ireland, being recorded about once or twice every decade – 1976, 1983, 1989, 1995, 2003 and now 2006 are the most recent times of such high temperatures. The highest ever recorded in Ireland was at Kilkenny Castle, County Kilkenny on 26 June 1887.
The highest mean temperatures during the heatwave were recorded at Merrion Square in Dublin city centre both months – in June and in July.
To put this into context, average daily maxima in Ireland in only vary from in June; and in July.
Despite the high daytime temperatures, night time temperatures were sometimes below average. Grass temperatures as low as were recorded at Birr, County Offaly on 23 June; however, the lowest air temperature recorded was at Straide, County Mayo on 14 June. The cool night time temperatures are thought to have made the heat wave more bearable there.
Sunshine levels were very high all over the country, with 257 hours of sunshine recorded at Cork Airport, County Cork in June and 283 hours of sunshine at Rosslare, County Wexford in July. The sunniest day during the two months was on 25 June, when Malin Head, County Donegal, recorded 15.8 hours of sunshine.
Rainfall levels were also quite low, with only of rain at Derrygreenagh, County Offaly and Fermoy, County Cork in June and of rain recorded at Merrion Square, Dublin in July. Parts of Munster and Leinster also recorded 21 days between 28 May and 17 June where no rainfall was recorded. There was also a period between 9 July and 27 July when no rainfall was recorded in Greater Dublin. Despite the low rainfall, drought was not an issue in Ireland.
In Ireland, was the warmest for 20 years and sunniest since 2000; was the sunniest on record, driest since 1995 and also one of the warmest; was the warmest on record, sunniest in 15 years and also driest since 1989; was average; was the warmest on record; was the warmest in many places since 2001 and sunniest since 2000; and was warmer and sunnier than usual. Overall, was the sunniest, driest and warmest summer since 1995; and one of the sunniest, driest and warmest on record. was the warmest on record in many places, and sunshine levels were well above normal; however, rainfall levels were also above average too.
The months of June and July 2006 are regarded as one of the best summers ever due to the high levels of sunshine, warm temperatures and low rainfall. Drought and health problems were not an issue in Ireland, unlike many parts of Europe – mostly because the heat was not as severe there.

Netherlands

July 2006
With a monthly average of, KNMI statistics show July 2006 was the warmest-ever month on record for the Netherlands. Around 500 or 1,000 more people than usual died in July 2006.
Earlier, the Four Day Marches of Nijmegen had been cancelled after only one day as hundreds of people collapsed the first day, two of them eventually dying due to fatal heat stroke. The walking people had to walk on open roads without any shade and there was not enough water for everyone. Paramedics had their hands full with hundreds of people who fainted due to the heat. The walking people had to deal with temperatures in the sun of. The air-temperatures on the first day of the four-day march was about. Forecasts showed even higher temperatures of for the next day, causing the organisation to cancel the remainder of the event.
The highest temperature was recorded on 19 July, when temperatures reached for most of the country the mid- to upper 30s °C, Especially in the south-east. The all-time record for the month of July was broken; temperatures soared to. A few hundred meters across the border into Germany, at the weather station Kalkar, located at the airport in Weeze, near Nijmegen, a maximum of was recorded on 19 July.
At some places especially in the south-east of the Netherlands temperatures passed for 15 or 16 days, and the average daytime month temperature was again in the south-east of the Netherlands and the lowest daytime temperature was at some locations. for the whole month of July. For two days daytime temperatures were below, making 29 days with temperatures of and higher.
During days when temperatures reached or higher, and on days without wind, the smog level was very high. Warnings were broadcast on television and radio, advising people to stay indoors as much as possible because the air pollution was very unhealthy, the smog was very strong and it was dangerously hot.
The Netherlands also had to deal with extreme drought in June and July. The rainfall in June was at some locations as low as, July was also extremely dry. Because of the extreme heat and drought vegetation was very dry, and the humidity levels were very low, causing brushfires.
On 30 January 2007, the United Nations published a report of all countries in the world with the most deaths related to natural disasters for 2006. The Netherlands appeared fourth place, with 1,000 heat-related deaths.

Poland

July 2006 was the warmest in Poland since the beginning of the meteorological measurements. For most of the month, the maximum temperature exceeded – even at night it rarely fell below. The average temperature was more than higher than normal, for example in Warsaw the average temperature in July 2006 is usually, in Wrocław, and in Poznań. The highest temperature was recorded in Słubice, near the German border. After the hot days, the temperature at night dropped very slowly. On 16 July in Słubice the temperature at night was and it was the warmest night in the entire history of meteorological measurements.
July 2006 was also extremely dry. In many regions it did not rain for 3–4 weeks. The river water levels were the lowest ever reported in Polish history and in the absence of rain, many crops dried up.
July 2006 in most Polish cities saw 300–350 sunshine hours : the highest number being in Poznań and in Warsaw.

Sweden

According to the Swedish Meteorological and Hydrological Institute, the city of Lund in Skåne in southern Sweden had the highest average temperatures for the month of July since records began in 1859. The rest of Sweden has however not broken the daily average temperatures from the record year 1994.
The highest temperature in Sweden in July 2006 was recorded in Målilla in Småland, where a temperature of was recorded on 6 July. This is the highest temperature recorded in the country since July 1994 when Kalmar and Söderhamn had.
Målilla and Ultuna are the places where the highest temperature ever in Sweden was recorded,, in 1947 and 1933 respectively.
Målilla was the warmest location during daytime, averaging, but with average lows being normal at fell a whole degree short of Lund's aforementioned value, where the average high was and low. The summer was warmer than usual in all of Sweden, but north of Stockholm and the Mälar valley the temperatures fell quickly, with the exception of the usual hotspot of Falun where the average high was in spite of its location a bit north of 60 degrees latitude.

Russia

Absolute maxima of July 2006 have been broken in
The warmest July in
Due to the extreme heat in July 2006, the ocean water reached a temperature normally reached in September. This increase in water temperature led to faster evaporation of ocean waters, making August one of the cloudiest and wettest months in recorded history in various western European countries. Many weather experts report this to be a direct consequence of the heat wave, as the high evaporation rate caused the atmosphere to generate many low pressure areas.
Despite this, September 2006 was again the warmest September on record, in the UK and elsewhere, due to high ocean temperatures, altered atmospheric pressure zones, and consequent different wind directions over Europe. The pressure zone changes were a consequence of the extra-tropical remnants of Atlantic hurricanes settling over the British Isles.
The Met Office announced on 16 October 2006 that the extended summer of May to September 2006 was the hottest summer ever recorded, the Central England temperature mean temperature of for this summer was warmer than the average temperatures of 1961–1990.

In the Netherlands

Just two months after July 2006, September 2006 became the warmest September since official measurements started. Additionally, October 2006 and November 2006 broke several temperature records. October was one of the warmest Octobers since measurements began, and November went into the record books as the second warmest November since official measurements started three hundred years prior. With temperatures from the north of the Netherlands to the south of Belgium ranging between at the end of November, previous records were shattered. The autumn of 2006 was the warmest autumn in history, breaking the old record of just one year prior by. The winter of 2006/2007 was the warmest in three hundred years as well, and so was the following spring.
With the exception of August 2006, every month from April 2006 to June 2007 saw temperatures above average, the most bizarre months being January 2007, which noted an average temperature of rather than, and April 2007, with as opposed to. Temperatures reached a record-breaking as early as 15 April. The average April daytime maximum in the Netherlands is around.
Such a sequence of events is unheard of in the Netherlands meteorological history, estimated to happen every 8,000 years when not taking global warming into account. It's been a result of a unique mixture of the hot summer increasing marine temperatures and Northern Atlantic hurricanes settling as depressions off the coast of Scotland, giving the European continent a constant stream of southern, fast winds rendering it unable to cool down from the Mediterranean through to northern Europe.

In Belgium

After the record-breaking month of July, August also broke records, but just the opposite of July. August 2006 was very rainy, at some places more than of rain fell. The sunshine totalled only 90 hours, less than half the normal, also a record. The average temperature was about. September 2006 was the warmest month in history, with an average temperature of, while the normal temperature is. September 2006 was thus warmer than August 2006. October 2006 was the second warmest in history with an average temperature of . November 2006 was the 4th warmest month in history, with an average temperature of . December 2006 was also too warm.
The autumn of 2006 was the warmest in recorded history.
2007 has also broke many records. January 2007 broke all temperature records – the average temperature was, while the normal is just. February 2007 set some day records and was 2 °C warmer than normal.
The winter of 2007 was also the warmest in history.
March 2007 was the 6th warmest month in history, just 0.8 °C less than the record. April 2007 was also the warmest month in history, the average temperature being 5 °C warmer than normal. Kleine Brogel had two tropical days on 15 and 16 April 2007, the earliest dates ever. May and June were also expected to be warmer than normal.

In Finland

The summer of 2006 was around 2 °C warmer than the 1971–2000 average. While the heat was not record breaking, the drought was: less than half of the average summer rainfall was received in large areas, and almost all of the country received less than 75% of the usual rain. In many localities As a whole, the two months leading to 16 January were the mildest such period ever recorded in Finland. In Helsinki, the mean temperature for this period was, beating the previous record of set in 1982–83. In Sodankylä, it was . In the second half of January, temperatures plunged and February 2007 was well below the average over 1971 to 2000.

In France

After the unusually hot July, August brought a big contrast with cool weather, cloudy skies and pretty wet weather patterns all around the country, with the exception of the Mediterranean coast.
September however turned to be very warm and sunny and in many parts of France it was the warmest in 50 years. October too was very warm and so was November, triggering in many regions the warmest autumn in recorded history. A very rare föhn-like warm spell affected northern and western France on 25 November and brought temperature as high as at 7 in the morning in Paris.
December, January and February also brought extremely mild weather making the winter of 2006/2007 the warmest in recorded history.
March was relatively uneventful with average temperatures and precipitations. However April broke the record for the warmest April on record. In many regions it was also the sunniest and the driest April on record. In northern and north-eastern France the departure from the normal of the average temperature was as high as 5 °C. May was too very warm making the spring 2007 the warmest in recorded history for some regions.

In the United Kingdom

Like the rest of Western Europe, August 2006 saw a dramatic turnaround, being a cloudy and wet month in many parts with daytime maxima below average – although the Central England Temperature was not recorded anywhere in the country. However, August 2008, which followed a much cooler July, was even duller and wetter. August 2010 again followed a similar pattern.
September 2006 was just as record-breaking as July, being the warmest on record and just as exceptionally, warmer than August had been. October and November, although not beating the records for the warmest set in 2001 and 1994 respectively, were also much warmer than average.
Winter 2006/07 was exceptionally mild, the warmest since 1868/69.
April 2007 was another record-breaker, with a CET of the warmest in over 300 years of temperature records and by a large margin remarkably this was smashed just 4 years later in 2011 with a CET of ! Temperatures were widely above, with over 200 hours of sunshine for much of the country. Parts of south-eastern Britain had no rain all month.

In Poland

After a hot and dry July, August 2006 was cold and very rainy. The average temperature hovered slightly below the long-term standards. At the beginning of the month in the west of the country experienced torrential rains and violent storms. In Wrocław decreased of water; that is 4 times more than usual. As a result of heavy rains came the floods, which affected mainly Lower Silesia.
For a change September 2006 was warm and dry. In the west, that month was more than warmer than the norm. In Słubice the average temperature was until. Early September brought gusty winds in Poland, near Bydgoszcz in Kuyavian-Pomeranian Voivodeship tornado passed, which escaped with the roots of several hundred trees.
October 2006 is also inscribed as one of the warmer in the history of meteorological measurements, as well as very dry. For many days the temperature exceeded degrees, reaching up to at the south of the country. It was also very sunny month, because reported about 150 sunshine hours.
November 2006 in Poland was the warmest from 10 years. The daily temperature reached up to and at night rarely dropped below. November was very wet, usually dropped of water, and the standard is approximately. Like in October the wind was blowing strongly, particularly on the coast of the Baltic Sea. At the end of the month, thick fog blocked airports in Warsaw, Kraków and Wrocław to 3 days.
Winter 2006/2007 was extremely warm and rain, in many cities, the snow lay only a few days. At night the temperature increased up to degrees, which at this time of year, it was an unprecedented phenomenon. In January 2007, the maximum temperature increased to, especially in the south, where often blow halny – a foehn wind. The average temperature in winter 2006/2007 in eastern Poland was about, normally and in western Poland, normally. This conclusion was the warmest winter since the measurements.

In Russia

December 2006 and January 2007 were the warmest months in Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Kazan and other cities of European Russia.
March 2007 was the warmest month in Moscow with a record maximum +
In May 2007 the absolute maximum of month in many cities has been established:
2007 and 2008 became the warmest years in Moscow history with average year temperatures + and +.