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Heatwave in France leaves thousands without power

The authorities in northern France scrambled on Wednesday to restore power to thousands of homes that were affected by a 'power cut' amid a scorching heatwave which has been sweeping western Europe for days.

In the effort to restore power, healthcare centres and critical sites are being prioritized. Generators have been?provided? for retirement homes after Tuesday's outages were blamed on an?incident with a transformer, they? added.

Officials said that the incident was an accident and related to this heat wave. "Nobody was injured."

According to Climate Monitor, record-breaking temperatures in Europe have caused disruptions to transport networks, and schools and tourist attractions to close.

Meteo France, the French weather agency, has stated that conditions are similar to "a heatwave" in August 2003 which lasted 16-days and caused an estimated 88,000 excess deaths throughout Europe.

The current heatwave was driven by an Omega block weather pattern, a shape which allows temperatures to build day after day.

The World Meteorological Organisation says that Europe is heating up at a rate more than double the global average. This makes heat waves?more likely.

Heatwaves have forced builders to change their working hours to avoid disasters. Retailers struggle to keep up with demand for portable air conditioners and fans, while farmers harvest grain after an afternoon ban due to fire hazards.

Dozens of people drowned when they jumped into water to escape the heat.

The grid operator in Britain asked generators to provide more power amid temperatures that are expected to reach record highs later on Wednesday.

British health authorities issued a "red-heat" alert for the second time,?warning of a life-threatening risk to the healthiest, the elderly and the sick.

The heat and speed restrictions have caused Britain's train operators to advise only essential travel on the two hottest days, Wednesday and Thursday.

On autopsy, it was revealed that two children in the south-east of France died from excessive heat after being left in a car.

The regional prosecutor stated that their mother claimed that the children were in her car without knowing.

The Italian health ministry issued the highest heat alert in 16 cities, including Florence, Milan, Rome, Turin, and Verona.

Meteorologists predicted that conditions would worsen, particularly in the 'central and northern regions', and that heatwaves were likely to peak between Sunday and monday.

The temperature could reach 41 degrees C between Tuscany, Emilia and Liguria. In coastal areas like Liguria, the combination of extreme heat and humidity can cause temperatures to feel as high as 45 degree C (113 F). (Reporting and editing by Clarence Fernandez, Sarah Young, Giselda Vasgnoni)

(source: Reuters)