Denmark records hottest day on record at 36.6C: weather service
People cool off at Amager Beach in Copenhagen, Denmark on June 27, 2026. Denmark recorded its highest temperature on record on June 27, 2026, the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI) said. Photo by EMIL NICOLAI HELMS / RITZAU SCANPIX / AFP
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Denmark recorded its highest temperature on record on
Saturday, the Danish Meteorological Institute (DMI) said.
"With 36.6 °C north of Odense, we have the warmest day
ever since measurements began in 1874," DMI said in a post to X.
The previous record temperature in the Scandinavian country
was 36.4 °C, which was recorded in August 1975, according to DMI.
DMI had warned that the record could be broken as a heatwave
swept over the Scandinavian country, with media showing images of Danes around
the country trying to cool off at beaches.
The record coincided with the opening of the Roskilde music
festival, and one attendant told public broadcaster DR that dragging his
luggage to the campsite was "unbearable".
DR reported that the festival had set up water stations for
the some 50,000 festival attendees.
Peter Tanev, meteorologist for broadcaster TV2, noted that
temperatures could go even higher later in the day.
"The heat usually doesn't peak until the middle of the
afternoon, so we're not done yet," Tanev said in a comment.
In neighbouring Sweden, the Swedish Meteorological and
Hydrological Institute (SMHI) also warned that temperatures in the south of
Sweden could reach up to 35 °C.

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