Wildfires burn in Türkiye as early heat waves hit parts of Europe
Early fire waves hit the area on Monday, and firefighters fought wildfires in Türkiye and France on Monday.
Forestry Minister Ibrahim Yumakli said that in Turkey, wildfires were stormy and storms were storms in Izmir in the western province, and Ibrahim Yumakli said that it forced the evacuation of four villages and two towns.
In recent years, Türkiye's coastal areas have been damaged by wildfires as summers become hotter and dryer, which scientists say is the result of climate change caused by humans.
In France, temperatures are expected to peak on Tuesday and Wednesday, with wildfires erupting in the Southwest Odd department on Sunday, where temperatures exceed 40 C and burning 400 hectares, forcing the campground and abbey to evacuate.
Officials said Monday that the fire was under control but has not been extinguished.
From Monday to mid-week, the French Meteorological Agency METEO listed a record 84 of 101 sectors in the country as an orange heatwave alarm. The Ministry of Education said that due to the calories, about 200 schools will be at least partially closed in the next three days.
The heat waves of the whole of Europe
Authorities issued a thermal alarm in Europe.
National Meteorological Agency AEMET said Spain is forecasting the peak of Monday's heat wave with its hottest June as the hottest June on record.
“In the next few days, at least Thursday, the intense heat will continue in much of Spain,” said Weather Bureau spokesman Ruben del Campo.

In Seville, southern Spain, global leaders are attending the United Nations meeting, and the temperature is expected to reach 42 C.
“It’s so bad,” said municipal worker Bernabe Rufo as he cleaned the fountain. “We need to keep looking for shadows.”
Major cities and tourist destinations in Europe are being recorded as the temperature of recording is unusually high at the end of June. In southern Europe, hot and dry weather brings conditions to wildfires.
Visitors are still looking for ways to deal with the high temperatures.
“I guess water, water and shadows, water and shadows, water and shadows,” said Nicole Shift, a 51-year-old tourist who got up early to enjoy the Seville historic sites and then before the heat was too high.

In Italy, the Ministry of Health issued a red alarm for heat waves in 16 cities. Weather website Ilmeteo. It said Monday's temperatures in Florence will be as high as 41 c, 38°C in Bologna and 37 c in Perugia.
Its president said the Lombardy region, part of the industrial heartland of northern Italy, is planning to ban open-air work in the hottest places of the day and to listen to unions’ requests.
Even in the Netherlands, which is usually cooler than many other parts of Europe, the Royal Meteorological Academy warns that in the coming days, temperatures may reach 35 to 40 C and are very high in humidity.
Amsterdam has extended opening hours in homeless shelters.

About 480,000 people have been killed by extremely high temperatures around the world
In Germany, there were heat warnings on Monday in most parts of the western and south-west areas, where temperatures rose to 34 C. Authorities called on consumers to limit their use of water. Temperatures are expected to peak by the middle of the week.
Commodity traders say the heat wave lowers the Rhine water level, hinders transportation and increases freight rates for cargo owners. Prices of benchmark electricity in Germany and France soared Tuesday as heat waves resulted in increased demand for cooling.

Calories can affect health in various ways, and experts care most about older people and babies, as well as outdoor workers and those struggling with their financial situation.
Globally, extreme heat kills up to 480,000 people per year, exceeding the combined losses of floods, earthquakes and hurricanes and poses an increasing risk to infrastructure, economy and health care systems.
The EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service said global surface temperatures averaged 1.4 c higher than the pre-industrial period last month, when humans began burning fossil fuels on an industrial scale.
Scientists say the main cause of climate change is greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels. Last year was the hottest one on the planet.