More than 1,100 deaths linked to Spain’s heatwave
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Officials reported 1,149 excess deaths in Spain from Aug 3 to 18 that could be attributed to scorching temperatures in the country.
PHOTO: AFP
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- Spain recorded 1,149 excess deaths between August 3-18, attributed to a 16-day heatwave, according to the Carlos III Health Institute data.
- The institute used the Mortality Monitoring System (MoMo), comparing data with historical trends and weather data from AEMET.
- July saw 1,060 excess deaths due to intense heat, a 57% increase from 2024, with experts linking heatwaves to global warming (AFP).
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MADRID – More than 1,100 deaths in Spain have been linked to a 16-day heatwave that ended on Aug 18, according to an estimate released on Aug 19 by the Carlos III Health Institute.
Officials reported 1,149 excess deaths in Spain from Aug 3 to 18 that could be attributed to the scorching temperatures, the public health agency said.
The institute used data from Spain’s Mortality Monitoring System (MoMo) that was compared with historical trends.
It also incorporates external factors, such as weather data from the national meteorological agency Aemet, to assess likely causes of mortality spikes.
Although MoMo cannot confirm a direct cause between deaths and high temperatures, it provides the most reliable estimate of fatalities in which heat was likely a decisive factor.
For July, the Carlos III institute had attributed 1,060 excess deaths to intense heat, a 57 per cent increase over the same period in 2024.
Climate experts say global warming is driving longer, more intense and more frequent heatwaves around the world. AFP

