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Spain attributes over 1,000 excess deaths to heat in second-hottestJune ever

MADRID, July 1 (Reuters) - Spain recorded 1,029 excess deaths last month attributable to heat, official data showed on ‌Wednesday, as a five-day heatwave with temperatures surpassing 40 degrees ‌Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) made it the second-hottest month of June on record.

• Data ​on the Health Ministry's daily mortality monitoring system MoMo showed this June had the most deaths attributed to heat since the same month in 2015.

• Average temperatures last month were 3.2 degrees ‌higher than normal, weather ⁠agency AEMET said, making it the second-hottest June on record after June 2025.

• At the heatwave's peak ⁠on June 23, 35.7 million people — roughly 73% of the country's population — were exposed to health risks due to the heat; 38% ​of them ​faced high risk.

• There have ​been 12 heatwaves in ‌June since 1975, with half of them occurring in the past decade.

• The 13 hottest months of June since records began in 1961 all occurred in the 21st century.

• This is evidence that heatwaves appear at the beginning of summer with a higher ‌frequency than before, said AEMET spokesperson ​Ruben del Campo.

• Between June 1 ​and 30, 165 maximum ​temperature records — 145 of them monthly and 20 ‌all-time — and 225 highest minimum temperature ​records — 180 monthly ​and 45 all-time — were broken at local measuring stations, AEMET said.

• The first heatwave of the summer was exceptional ​in the country's ‌north "not only because of its intensity, but also because of ​its duration and persistence," the agency added.

(Reporting by David ​Latona; Editing by Joe Bavier)

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