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German trains evacuated due to scorching heat: company

Sunbathers crowd the beach in the northern German coastal town of Zinnowitz on Usedom Island on July 11, 2010 as the country experiences a heat-wave with temperatures reaching 37 degrees centigrade. Photo courtesy AFP.

Britain swelters as health risks rise
London (AFP) July 10, 2010 - Many parts of Britain Saturday sweltered in temperatures which health authorities say may have already caused deaths, and a lack of rain has left parkland and gardens parched. The highest temperature in Britain this year was recorded on Friday, at 31.7 degrees Celsius (89.1 degrees Fahrenheit) in Gravesend, southeast England, and similar conditions were expected in the region and eastern England on Saturday. The Health Protection Agency (HPA) said the daytime heat and the fact that temperatures remained high at night -- around 20 degrees Celsius -- posed health risks to the elderly and very young children.

The agency also said there had been "several hundred" more deaths than normal over the past two weeks and some appeared to be linked to the heat. "Although these are very preliminary data, their experts suggest that the hot weather may have been the cause for some of the increase," an HPA spokesman said. Wayne Elliott, head of health forecasting at the Met Office, said: "While there is the possibility of daytime temperatures reaching trigger thresholds, it is the night time values which are of real concern. "High humidity and the lack of any breeze could make matters worse for people with underlying health problems." The Met Office's heat warning is level two on its four level warning scale.

Britain has experienced the driest first six months of the year since 1953 and the latest temperatures have taken an additional toll on parkland and gardens. Aerial photographs show that the normally lush turf of Hyde Park in central London has been reduced to a dusty landscape. However, the dryness did not extend across Britain. Heavy rain fell on northern England and Scotland on Friday and Saturday. In the 2003 heatwave, there were 2,000 to 3,000 excess deaths in England, among 30,000 across Europe.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (AFP) July 11, 2010
Sweltering temperatures forced the evacuation of three German high-speed trains after an air-conditioning breakdown made the carriages unbearable, a company spokesman said Sunday.

As a heatwave gripped the country, state-owned rail operator Deutsche Bahn said the air-conditioning systems in the three trains travelling from Berlin to the Rhineland in the west of the country had overheated.

The scorching heat in the carriages led personnel to order the evacuations of the hundreds of passengers on board in the cities of Hanover and Bielefeld. "We apologise for our air conditioners malfunctioning in very high temperatures," the spokesman said.

Local media said temperatures in the packed train that stopped in Bielefeld had reached more than 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit).

"It was like a sauna," a 16-year-old told the daily Westfalenblatt.

Several passengers, fearing they would collapse, had to lie down on the floor of the carriages. The mother of a small boy attempted to smash a window with an emergency hammer to let in fresh air, the newspaper reported.

Rail staff and emergency services workers handed out cold drinks to dehydrated passengers before they were placed on other trains, the company spokesman said.

earlier related report
Mercury soars across Europe
Paris (AFP) July 10, 2010 - Europe baked Saturday in scorching summer temperatures, as authorities warned of the danger to the very young and old and linked a number of deaths to the heatwave.

In Spain, officials said three people had died as a result of the weather including a 24-year-old man.

Warm weather alerts were in place in seven regions of central and southern Spain with temperatures of up to 39 degrees Celsius (102 degrees Fahrenheit), said the national meteorological agency Aemet. Temperatures were expected to start to drop on Sunday and Monday.

The heat eased slightly in Paris on Saturday where the temperature was recorded at 26 degrees Celsius (78.8 degrees Fahrenheit) at 1500 GMT, down from 33 degrees Celsius (91.4 degrees Fahrenheit) 24 hours earlier on Friday.

But although an orange alert was lifted for the capital and three other departments nationwide, they would stay in place overnight for four others in central and eastern France, said the French national meteorological service, Meteo France.

The heatwave in those areas was also expected to be over by early Sunday.

"The spell of high temperatures that started on Thursday is coming to its end," Meteo France said in a bulletin.

Britain's highest temperature of the year -- 31.7 degrees Celsius (89.1 degrees Fahrenheit) -- was recorded at Gravesend in southeastern England on Friday.

The Health Protection Agency (HPA) said the daytime heat and the fact that temperatures remained high at night -- around 20 degrees Celsius -- posed health risks to the elderly and very young children.

The agency also said there had been "several hundred" more deaths than normal over the past two weeks and some appeared to be linked to the heat.

"Although these are very preliminary data, their experts suggest that the hot weather may have been the cause for some of the increase," an HPA spokesman said.

The Met Office's heat warning stood at level two on its four level warning scale. Britain has experienced the driest first six months of the year since 1953.

However, the dryness did not extend across Britain. Heavy rain fell on northern England and Scotland on Friday and Saturday.

In Belgium several towns faced water shortages caused by the hot weather.

Bullange in eastern Belgium has seen several sources dry up and risks a critical situation if there is no rain by the end of next week, the Belga agency quoted mayor Friedhelm Wirtz as saying.

Water was being tankered in an attempt to compensate for the shortages.

On Friday, three other southeastern communes -- Chiny, Bellevaux and Hastiere -- each appealed to the disaster and emergency services for water supplies, the interior ministry added.



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WEATHER REPORT
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Targets set by policy makers to slow global warming are too soft to prevent more heatwaves and extreme temperatures in the United States within a few years, with grim consequences for human health and farming, a study warned this week. Although the United States and more than 100 other countries agreed in Copenhagen last year to take action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions "so as to hold t ... read more







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