Index  ›  health  ›  NY Post
health · NY Post ↗

France records 1,000 excess deaths in record-breaking European heat wave

NY Post Published Jun 28, 2026 Reviewed Jul 3, 2026 ✓ Reviewed by citations.press editors
Citation-ready fact
France recorded 1,000 excess deaths during the heat wave.
1000 deaths · excess deaths
public health agency, public health agency
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
The heat wave began on June 20.
Scientists, scientists
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Health Minister Stephanie Rist said the impact of the heat wave could linger for up to ten days after the weather had ebbed.
10 days · impact linger
Health Minister Stephanie Rist, Health Minister
View source ↗
Citation-ready fact
Most of the deaths involved people aged 65 and older.
65 years · age of deaths
Sante Publique, public health agency
View source ↗

See more of our coverage in your search results.

PARIS – France has recorded 1,000 excess deaths during the blistering heat wave sweeping Europe, the ​public health agency said on Sunday, warning that ‌the true figure was likely to be higher.

Detailing its preliminary count of excess deaths, Sante Publique said most of the ​fatalities involved older people and that it expected ​the mortality rate to rise as more information ⁠became available about deaths in residential care and homes.

Europeans ​have been enduring blistering conditions during a heat wave that has ​been linked to dozens of deaths — shattering records, disrupting power generation and damaging infrastructure.

Scientists have said the heat wave, which began on ​June 20, was the worst recorded in Europe, ​where the climate is changing faster than the global average.

But while France’s weather agency said the extreme heat had diminished in most parts of the country, some areas in the ​northeast were still ​under a ⁠heat wave advisory.

Health Minister Stephanie Rist told La Tribune newspaper that the impact of ​the heat wave could linger for as long ​as ten ⁠days after the weather had ebbed.

“The episode is not finished,” she told broadcaster BFM.

Most of the deaths involved ⁠people ​aged 65 and older, though the ​health effects of the extreme heat affected all categories of the population, ​Sante Publique said.

This article was originally published by NY Post ↗. citations.press indexes the source-backed facts above and links to the original. Something wrong? Corrections policy · Report an error