France has recorded nearly 1,000 excess deaths during a devastating heatwave, with elderly residents hardest hit as temperatures crossed 40°C across Europe.
By Imran Malik | MediaBites News Desk
France is facing one of its deadliest climate-related disasters in recent years after authorities confirmed that nearly 1,000 excess deaths were recorded during an intense heatwave that scorched the country and large parts of western Europe.
According to Public Health France, the deaths began rising sharply from June 24 as temperatures surged above 40 degrees Celsius in several regions, overwhelming hospitals, emergency responders and healthcare services.
Officials said the majority of victims were elderly people, with around 85 percent aged 65 and above.
The hardest-hit areas were regions placed under the highest red heat alert, particularly Île-de-France — the densely populated region that includes Paris and surrounding suburbs.
Authorities reported a worrying increase in deaths occurring inside homes, especially among isolated elderly residents living alone without adequate cooling or assistance.
French health officials described the current figures as preliminary and warned the final death toll could rise further as additional data is collected in the coming days.
“This observation serves as a reminder of the need for solidarity measures toward isolated people,” Public Health France said in a statement.
The brutal heatwave has disrupted life across Europe, forcing schools to close, public transport systems to slow down and outdoor activities to be suspended in several countries.
Emergency services across France have been flooded with calls related to dehydration, heatstroke and respiratory complications, while firefighters continue responding to heat-related incidents around the clock.
Climate experts say the disaster reflects a growing global climate emergency driven by rising greenhouse gas emissions and worsening global warming.
Scientists have repeatedly warned that Europe is becoming increasingly vulnerable to longer, more intense and more frequent heatwaves.
Urban areas have been particularly affected because buildings and roads trap heat overnight, creating dangerous “urban heat island” conditions that prevent temperatures from cooling after sunset.
The latest tragedy has reignited debate across Europe about climate preparedness, healthcare infrastructure and the urgent need to protect vulnerable populations from extreme weather events.
While temperatures began easing slightly in parts of France on Sunday, meteorologists warned that unusually high summer temperatures are likely to continue across Europe in the coming weeks.
Environmental experts say the deadly heatwave may become another turning point in Europe’s climate debate as governments face mounting pressure to strengthen climate adaptation policies before extreme weather events become even deadlier.

