Heat‑Wave Alerts Get Smarter, Save Lives

SpainThu Feb 26 2026
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In Spain, 2025 was the hottest summer on record, beating 2022 by about one tenth of a degree. Yet, fewer people died from the heat—908 deaths less than in 2022. Researchers wondered if a tweak to how authorities warn about heat waves could explain this drop. They looked at each province’s yearly heat‑wave intensity and the deaths linked to those waves. By drawing a line through the data, they found that from 2015 to 2023 an extra degree of heat added roughly 1. 74 deaths per province each year. In the last two years, that number fell to 1. 66 deaths per degree.
If Spain had used the older slope for 2025, they would have expected about 4, 082 heat‑related deaths. Using the newer slope gives only 3, 894—an improvement of almost a thousand lives. The study does not rule out other reasons for the decline, but it suggests that fine‑tuned, local heat alerts can make a real difference. Smaller‑scale warnings mean communities act faster and more precisely, helping people avoid the worst effects of extreme temperatures. The takeaway: better local heat‑wave plans could save thousands of lives each summer.
https://localnews.ai/article/heatwave-alerts-get-smarter-save-lives-1f416775

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