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Europe fastest-warming continent; endured hottest year in 2024

IANS April 17, 2025 189 views

Europe experienced its most extreme climate year in 2024, with unprecedented heat, widespread flooding, and devastating wildfires. The continent emerged as the world's fastest-warming region, suffering significant human and economic losses from climate-related events. Despite the challenges, there's a glimmer of hope with renewable energy reaching a record 45% of electricity generation. Climate experts warn that urgent adaptation and mitigation strategies are crucial to address these escalating environmental challenges.

"Every additional fraction of a degree of temperature rise matters" - Celeste Saulo, WMO Secretary-General"
London, April 17: Europe experienced its hottest year on record in 2024, marked by deadly floods, prolonged heatwaves, and unprecedented climate extremes, according to a joint report released this week by the World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) and the Copernicus Climate Change Service (C3S).

Key Points

1

Europe endured hottest year with record-breaking heatwaves and floods

2

335 lives lost and €18 billion in climate damage

3

Renewable energy reached 45% of electricity generation

The 'European State of the Climate 2024' report highlights that Europe remains the world's fastest-warming continent, experiencing "serious impacts from extreme weather and climate change."

Extreme weather events left a significant toll. Last year saw the most widespread flooding in Europe since 2013, with almost one-third of the river network exceeding the "high" flood threshold and 12 per cent surpassing the "severe" flood threshold.

At least 335 people lost their lives and 413,000 were affected by storms and floods.

Heat-related stress also surged. Europe recorded its second-highest number of days with "strong," "very strong," and "extreme" heat stress, with nearly 60 per cent of the continent experiencing above-average days of "strong heat stress."

Southeastern Europe endured its longest heatwave on record in July, lasting 13 consecutive days and affecting 55 per cent of the region. There were record-breaking numbers of days with at least "strong heat stress" (66) and tropical nights (23) in southeastern Europe during summer.

For the year as a whole, sea surface temperatures for the European region and the Mediterranean Sea were the highest-ever recorded, at 0.7 degrees Celsius and 1.2 degrees Celsius above average, respectively.

The year's climate extremes led to record glacier losses across all European regions, with glaciers in Scandinavia and Svalbard, an archipelago between Norway and the North Pole, experiencing their highest rates of mass loss on record -- averaging a thickness loss of 1.8 metres in Scandinavia and 2.7 metres in Svalbard.

In September, fires in Portugal burned around 1,100 square kilometres in one week, representing around a quarter of Europe's total annual burned area. An estimated 42,000 people were affected by wildfires in Europe.

"These extreme events led to an estimated 18 billion euros ($20.4 billion) of damages, 85 per cent of which is attributed to flooding," said Samantha Burgess, deputy director of C3S, during a press conference to discuss the report's key findings.

WMO Secretary-General Celeste Saulo emphasised the urgency of climate action in a statement: "Every additional fraction of a degree of temperature rise matters because it accentuates the risks to our lives, to economies and to the planet. Adaptation is a must."

Despite the challenges, the report has a silver lining. The proportion of electricity generation by renewables in Europe reached a record high in 2024, and now stands at 45 per cent, Xinhua news agency reported.

The 'European State of the Climate' report is released annually and provides a comprehensive assessment of climate trends and impacts across the continent.

This year's edition is the eighth in the series and the second that has been published jointly with Copernicus, the European Union's Earth observation programme.

Reader Comments

M
Maria K.
This is terrifying 😨 I remember last summer in Spain - we had 45°C days for weeks! When will governments take real action? The renewable energy progress is good but we need faster change.
T
Thomas R.
The report is well-researched but focuses too much on problems without highlighting enough solutions. We need more coverage of what individuals can do beyond just waiting for policy changes.
J
Jakub P.
My hometown in Poland was underwater for 3 weeks last spring. Never seen flooding like that in my 50 years. Climate change isn't some future threat - it's here now.
L
Lena S.
That statistic about 45% renewable energy gives me hope! We're making progress, just not fast enough. Maybe this report will wake more people up 🤞
P
Pierre D.
The glacier loss numbers are shocking - 2.7m thickness gone in Svalbard! I visited there 10 years ago and the guides warned this would happen. We didn't listen then, will we listen now?
A
Anika V.
Important reporting, but the human cost gets lost in all the statistics. 335 lives lost and 413,000 affected - these are people's families, homes, livelihoods. Climate action saves lives.

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