This weekend (almost) the entire kingdom will experience severe weather, according to the meteorologists. But which parts of the country have been this summer’s weather winners and weather losers? Check the lists that give answers to whether there has been a record summer where you live.
Updated just now
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The summer will immediately enter its third month, and the joint holiday is over. If you weren’t one of those who got on a plane during the flight chaos this summer – or if you prefer to spend your holidays in your home regions – you’ve certainly dealt with the fiery ball of fire we call the sun.
Researchers have this summer warned that heat waves and extreme heat can occur as a consequence of higher emissions and global warming. We also have in Norway felt the heat wave which has hit Europe.
VG has been sent preliminary data from the Meteorological Institute summarizing the weather in June and July. This is what the numbers show:
Record hot
The month of June was hot, very hot. according to Meteorological Institute June was the tenth warmest June in Norway ever. On average, the temperature in June was 1.7 degrees warmer than usual.
Towards the end of the month it was really hot in northern Norway, and heat records were blown up on an assembly line. As many as 44 weather stations set new temperature records, most of them in the north.
Far, far, north, in Svalbard, it was also the warmest June on record, the Meteorological Institute informs.
But July also got hotter, very hot. A couple of days before we move into August, the statistics show that seven hot July records have been set in Norway – the vast majority of them in the north of the country.
Altogether, 51 heat records were set in Norway during June and July, according to meteorologists’ statistics.