The Old Continent is cooked.

Europe is sweltering amid an unprecedented heat wave that has sent temperatures soaring to record-breaking heights across the continent.

On Tuesday, France hit its hottest day ever after the country’s national thermal indicator — an average of temperatures measured at 30 weather stations — reached a blistering 85.6 Fahrenheit. This eclipsed the previous high water mark of 84.9°F, which dated back to the scorching heat waves in August 2003 and July 2019, the AP reported.

A woman drinking water from a public tap during a heatwave in Zagreb, Croatia on June 13, 2026. ANTONIO BAT/EPA/Shutterstock

Some of the weather stations logged daytime highs of 104 degrees and there are no signs of the conditions easing until Friday. The weather was so oppressive that over 40 people reportedly drowned to death while attempting to beat the heat, amid the country’s limited access to air conditioning.

Meanwhile, across the English Channel, officials issued a rare red alert for certain parts of the UK for Wednesday morning through Thursday night. Met Office meteorologists forecast that temps would reach 104 degrees Celsius in Wales and Central and southern England during that time, which would mark the hottest day ever for this early in the year.

Similar high heat warnings were issued for Spain, Portugal, Switzerland, Luxembourg and Germany, where temps were expected to hit or exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit, the New York Times reported.

What is the European heat dome?

What’s to blame for this continental pressure cooker? Meteorologists point to phenomena called heat domes, high-pressure systems high in the atmosphere that remain in place for several days, hot-boxing the region below with heat and humidity like a dumpling steamer, the AP reported.

Met Office experts have analogized the event to a pot lid that prevents warm air from the Earth’s surface from rising and forming clouds. Fewer clouds mean more direct sunshine and therefore hotter ground temperatures.

This lid also traps and recycles heat, further bringing the regional temps to a proverbial boil.

People swimming in the Canal Saint-Martin to cool off during a heatwave in Paris on June 13, 2026. Anadolu via Getty Images

No cooling these jets

Heat domes are created by a bulge in the jet stream, fast-flowing bands of wind in Earth’s upper atmosphere that play a critical role in steering global weather systems.

“High-pressure system means that the air is sinking, and as the air goes down to lower altitudes, it becomes compressed,” Mireia Ginesta, a research associate at the Climate Litigation Lab at the Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment in Oxford, told the AP. “So the pressure increases and the temperature also increases.”

Turning up the heat

Climatologists fear that a warming atmosphere creates a hotter baseline from which the heat domes develop, increasing the likelihood that they’ll spark a heat wave like the one baking Europe, according to UK meteorology professor Hannah Cloke.

Meanwhile, these conditions mean that these heatwaves will be longer and more intense with wider impacts on the environment, such as droughts and wildfires.

Coincidentally, this comes as the United Nations’ influential climate change committee has discarded dire temperature increase models spouted by doomsdayers on the Left.

A caring dog sitter cools off dogs in a mist fountain as France experiences a heatwave, in central Paris on June 23, 2026. AFP via Getty Images

Keeping one’s cool

Fortunately, there are myriad ways people can avoid being roasted under the heat dome.

Experts recommend staying hydrated, refraining from working out during periods of extreme heat, remaining in the shade, and cooling off in water bodies like streams, rivers and seas.

Authorities in France, meanwhile, have introduced measures to protect citizens, ranging from canceling trains and sporting events to cracking down on public drinking as medicals warned about the danger of combining alcohol and extreme heat.

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