(Bloomberg) -- Europe’s latest summer heatwave broke heat records just weeks after the continent recorded its hottest ever June, fueling concern that a shifting climate is making extreme weather events the norm.

Residents in Paris, London and Brussels fought to stay cool as temperatures soared 10 degrees Celsius above July averages, making those cities hotter than Singapore and Cairo. Forecasters said the U.K. could see its warmest day on record Thursday just weeks after a June warm front broke all-time readings in France.

The heat is drying up some of Europe’s busiest rivers, making the Danube impassable to cargo and cruise ships and prompting at least six nuclear reactors in France to scale back output. In London, engineers on the Underground railway network warned passengers to expect delays if tracks buckle.

“The likelihood of two record-braking heatwaves have almost certainly gone up due to climate change,” said James Screen, climatologist at the University of Exeter in southern England. “More hot extremes is one of its simplest and well-understood effects.”

Temperature records may shatter in the U.K., as southeastern England is forecast to reach 39 degrees Celsius (102 Fahrenheit) on Thursday, according to the Met Office. France is also seeing sweltering weather, with Paris peaking at 42 degrees Celsius, Meteo France says. Cooler weather is due from Friday.

On Wednesday, temperatures in the Netherlands hit an all-time high of 38.8 degrees at a military airbase just north of the Belgian, breaking a record that stood for 75 years. Parts of Belgium rose above 40 degrees for the first time ever, according to the InfoClimat website.

In Germany, officials at the DWD federal weather service issued heatwave and wildfire warnings after all-time highs on Wednesday.

“It’s highly likely the all time record will fall on Thursday if not Wednesday,” said Andreas Friedrich, meteorologist at Germany’s national forecaster as experts parsed data from weather stations dotted around the country.

Consecutive heatwaves are fueling political and scientific debate in Europe. Measures including a tax on carbon emissions are under discussion as incoming European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen said environmental policy was the continent’s top political priority.

Wildfires in Sweden along with increasingly violent storms in the Mediterranean and a dryer Rhine River in Germany have unsettled voters, some of whom joined protests in the past few months.

Electricity prices in France spiked to their highest level since February as consumers turned on fans and air conditioning units. The utility Electricite de France SA dialed down nuclear reactors after rivers waters used to cool the power units became too warm. The heat also is curbing expectations for corn yields this season.

Water levels in Germany’s Rhine river fell closer to the crisis levels seen last summer, increasing concern that the waterway could become impassable to shipping for a second consecutive year. Utilities depend on the river to bring coal to power stations.

In Britain, the Salvation Army asked members of the public to provide water, sunscreen and water to the country’s homeless people.

“What makes this year’s heatwaves so unusual is they have both been relatively early in the year, and have not occurred following a prolonged spell of warmth,” said Simon Lee, climatologist at the University of Reading. “This year, it seems it’s been easier to achieve these unusually high temperatures, which has given enough time in the season for it to happen more than once.”

Changes to the jet stream, which would normally blow in cooler weather from the Atlantic Ocean, are contributing to the build-up of hot and dry conditions over the continent. That has turned a few sunny days into dangerous heatwaves, according to Dim Coumou, a climatologist at the Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam.

The heatwave is the third to hit Europe this year after a similar weather pattern pushed temperatures above 20 degrees for several days in February, sparking wildfires in northern England and the Alps. A June heatwave broke temperature records in France and saw wildfires ignite in Germany, Portugal and Spain.

To contact the reporters on this story: William Wilkes in Frankfurt at wwilkes1@bloomberg.net;Megan Durisin in London at mdurisin1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Reed Landberg at landberg@bloomberg.net, Lars Paulsson

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