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Saturday, July 26, 2025

Spain swelters in temperatures more typical of summer

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821 days ago
20230427

Spain’s na­tion­al weath­er ser­vice said tem­per­a­tures would “reach val­ues typ­i­cal of sum­mer” across most of the coun­try, with a high of 38 de­grees Cel­sius (100 de­grees Fahren­heit) fore­cast Thurs­day for the south­ern Guadalquivir Val­ley.

As peo­ple swel­tered in a coun­try ex­pe­ri­enc­ing a se­vere drought, Span­ish me­dia re­port­ed that the Health Min­istry would con­sid­er im­ple­ment­ing a heat pre­ven­tion plan two weeks ear­ly to help re­gions re­spond to the ef­fects of the un­sea­son­ably warm weath­er.

The State Me­te­o­ro­log­i­cal Agency, which is known by the Span­ish acronym AEMET, said tem­per­a­tures were “ex­cep­tion­al­ly high” for April be­cause of a mass of very warm and dry air com­ing from North Africa.

With a long week­end com­ing up, some peo­ple packed beach­es along the coast. But res­i­dents who could not es­cape the heat in Spain’s in­land cap­i­tal, Madrid, were less lucky. Loli Gutiér­rez, 70, said she was wor­ried about what con­di­tions would be like when sum­mer ac­tu­al­ly comes.

“This is al­ready un­bear­able. We are on­ly in April. If this hap­pen­ing in April, how is it go­ing to be June?” she said.

Last year was Spain’s hottest since record-keep­ing start­ed in 1961, and al­so the coun­try’s sixth-dri­est de­spite the pres­ence of weath­er phe­nom­e­non La Niña, which slight­ly damp­ened glob­al av­er­age tem­per­a­tures.

Three years of scant rain­fall and high tem­per­a­tures put Spain of­fi­cial­ly in­to long-term drought last month.

The Span­ish gov­ern­ment has re­quest­ed emer­gency funds from the Eu­ro­pean Union to sup­port farm­ers and ranch­ers in the coun­try’s agri­cul­tur­al heart­lands, in­clud­ing the Guadalquivir Val­ley.

The world’s biggest ex­porter of olive oil, Spain is al­so an im­por­tant pro­duc­er of fruits and veg­eta­bles for the Eu­ro­pean mar­ket. The drought has al­ready dri­ven up prices of Span­ish olive oil to record lev­els.

Cur­rent­ly, 27% of Span­ish ter­ri­to­ry is clas­si­fied as in a drought “emer­gency” or “alert,” ac­cord­ing to the Eco­log­i­cal Tran­si­tion Min­istry, and wa­ter re­serves are at 50% of ca­pac­i­ty na­tion­al­ly.

MADRID (AP)

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