Italy faces hottest weekend of the year so far as temperatures set to exceed 40C

Rome: Temperatures are likely to exceed 40C in southern Italy as this weekend is forecast to be the hottest the country has seen so far this year, according to Euronews.

Peaks of up to 43C are expected with the southern mainland, as well as the two major islands Sardinia and Sicily the worst affected regions.

From 10 to 11 August, temperatures are also expected to climb to between 39 and 40C across central and northern Italy. Northern cities including Bolzano, Ferrara and Bologna won’t be spared from the intense heat.

Forecasters say that the heatwave will also be accompanied by high humidity for many, increasing the chance of physical discomfort and the risk for vulnerable groups like the elderly and children. A bulletin from the Ministry of Health has issued orange warnings for Campobasso, Frosinone, Latina, Perugia and Rome on 7 August.

From 8 August Perugia and Rome are under red warnings due to the heat and Brescia, Campobasso, Florence, Frosinone, Latina and Rieti have been given orange warnings.

Meteorologists have warned that there is also a possibility of intense thunderstorms, especially in the north of Italy. The Alpine and Appenine regions are likely to see the worst weather.

The prolonged high temperatures have also pushed the freezing level in mountain areas to 5,000 metres which may accelerate the melting of Alpine glaciers.

Spain is also facing a week of extreme weather with temperatures set to break 40C in many parts of the country – particularly the south and inland areas.

“Very high temperatures over the next few days in large parts of Spain. If we compare the thermal character predicted for the air mass settled over the country with records from 1991 to 2020, it will be one of the warmest… even with record values,” Spain’s meteorological agency Aemet wrote in a post on social media site X.

The highest temperatures have been forecast in the inland valley regions in the south of the country as well as in parts of Castilla-La Mancha.

On Tuesday, Spanish meteorological agency Aemet put the cities of Toledo and Cordoba on orange alert for heat. Other parts of Andalusia and Castilla-La Mancha, as well as in areas of Aragón, the Balearic Islands, Castilla y Leon, Catalonia, Extremadura, Madrid, Murcia and Valencia were also given yellow weather warnings.

But the high temperatures are just one form of extreme weather forecast to hit Spain this week. Experts say in northeast and mountainous areas of the north there is the possibility of thunderstorms, hail and winds of up to 90 kmh.

There will be “locally strong storms in the Pyrenees and eastern Iberian mountains,” according to Aemet. It adds that “strong windy spells are not ruled out on the Galacian Atlantic coasts.”