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Vol. I · No. 183 · 2119 Reports Friday, July 3, 2026
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Reuters examines economic toll of 2026 US and Europe heatwaves

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Topics in This Edition

HeatwavesEconomic impactEnergy pricesClimate change

Summary

The segment covers the July 2026 US heatwave affecting the East Coast and Midwest with forecast highs of 100-115°F (heat index), straining the power grid amid data center demand and driving wholesale prices sharply higher. It notes similar extreme heat in Europe exceeding 40°C, with quantified economic losses, agricultural and tourism disruptions, and adaptation needs for cities and offices. It draws on official estimates, grid operator data, and company statements, referencing a Reuters report on Carlsberg beer sales and scientific consensus on climate change attribution.

Editorial Assessment

The broadcast accurately conveys documented temperature extremes, grid stress, and cost estimates from primary sources such as PJM and German authorities. Viewer context missing includes the precise timing and magnitude of price spikes relative to normal volatility and the full scope of health versus productivity costs. Framing is neutral and data-driven, avoiding alarmism or minimization; the climate link is stated as scientific consensus without overstatement. Carlsberg anecdote aligns with broader industry reporting on heat thresholds but lacks specific 2026 sales figures here.

Key Moments

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US heatwave with 100-115°F forecasts from East Coast to Midwest over July 4 weekend

Confirmed by NWS forecasts and multiple outlets reporting record heat indices in the Midwest and Northeast

missing context

PJM wholesale prices hit $1,600/MWh at peak, up from normal ~$40

PJM reported spikes above $1,000/MWh with some zones nearing or exceeding that level amid record demand; $1,600 cited in related reporting

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Germany estimates every day over 30°C costs economy €430 million

Matches official German estimate cited in contemporaneous Reuters reporting on heat impacts

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Heatwaves on this scale impossible without climate change from fossil fuels

Supported by World Weather Attribution studies finding recent European events virtually impossible without human-caused warming

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Carlsberg reports beer sales impacted as beer gardens emptied in extreme heat

Aligns with Reuters reporting that extreme heat alters alcohol sales patterns once temperatures exceed ~32°C

Sources Consulted

  1. Heat Wave Spreads East on Wednesday, Putting Millions More at Risk
  2. Largest US power grid details price spikes, warns on record demand
  3. Net-zero champion Europe snared by climate change on its doorstep
  4. Extreme heat could change the mix for European drinks makers
  5. European heatwave is worst ever and impossible without climate crisis, scientists say

Background

  1. 2026 European heatwaves