Switzerland sees freezing point climb to record high above Alpine summits
Switzerland, which is caught in Europe's extreme heatwave, has seen freezing point rise way above its highest summits, smashing a record set 27 years ago, meteorologists said on Monday.
Scientists say human-induced climate change is amplifying the record heatwaves seen in several parts of the planet in recent weeks.
Weather balloons rose to 5,184 metres (17,008 feet) above the Alpine country overnight before they found freezing point (0 degrees Celsius, 32 degrees Fahrenheit), MeteoSwiss said in a tweet.
That was nearly 70 metres higher than the previous Swiss record of 5,117 metres, measured on July 20, 1995, and 375 metres above the summit of Europe's highest peak, Mont Blanc in the French Alps.
It is extremely rare for the freezing point to be measured above 5,000 metres in Europe.
Leading Swiss glaciologist Matthias Huss warned this month that rising temperatures were causing freshwater glaciers to melt faster than ever.
"Glaciers in the Alps are so completely off from what we've seen before. I'm really alarmed by the situation," he tweeted on July 17.
"The measurements collected at Griesgletscher today show that even with respect to the previous record in 2003 we're one...