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France Suffers Through Hottest Day In Its History — 113 Fahrenheit

A boy jumps into the water of the Trocadero Fountain in Paris on Friday, to find relief from the heat wave.
A boy jumps into the water of the Trocadero Fountain in Paris on Friday, to find relief from the heat wave.

Updated at 8:23 p.m. ET

In the small, quaint town of Villevieille, southern France, the temperature to 113.2 degrees on Friday.

Météo-France, the national weather service, its highest warning level for four regions of the country.

"Tons of all-time records in the Mediterranean area, very wildly hit," Météo-France meteorologist . He said the temperature at Montpellier airport, 110.3 degrees Fahrenheit, "surpassed the previous all-time record" by 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit, with measurements first taken in 1946.

French Prime Minister Édouard Philippe as "exceptional in its precocity and intensity," saying government preparations were not an overreaction but a necessity.

Some 4,000 schools closed for the day out of concern for children's safety, he said. As part of emergency heat wave plans, public cooling rooms had opened in Paris and other cities, and parks and pools stayed open for extended hours. Parisians could also use a to find places to cool down.

But at least four people have drowned in France this week, .

The French government started to take blistering temperatures seriously after 2003, when an estimated 15,000 people died in a heat wave. At the time, government officials were for overlooking the health threats.

Record temperatures have gripped other parts of Europe this week. Heat records were broken in , , the Czech Republic, Switzerland, Luxembourg and the small principality of Andorra, between France and Spain.

In Spain, firefighters have spent days trying to tame a raging wildfire said to have been sparked by that had been improperly stored.

At least two people in Spain were in connection with the weather — a 17-year-old man who had been working in a field in Andalusia and an 80-year-old man who died at a street intersection in the northern city of Valladolid.

The that as rising greenhouse gas emissions have warmed the climate, Europe's number of warm days doubled between 1960 and 2018. The continent is projected to have similar or worse heat waves "as often as every two years" in the second half of the 21st century, in the highest emission scenario of four scenarios used by the U.N. Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Corrected: June 27, 2019 at 10:00 PM MDT
A previous version of this story incorrectly said the difference between the record high temperatures at the Montpellier airport was 42.4 degrees Fahrenheit. In fact it was 10.4 degrees Fahrenheit.
Sasha Ingber is a reporter on NPR's breaking news desk, where she covers national and international affairs of the day.