With temperatures 1.8°C above the norm, Switzerland is set to record its fourth hottest May since 1864. The unusually warm spring comes as climatologists warn that Europe's heatwave season is expanding, underscoring growing climate change risks.

"As every month is getting warmer, we are seeing the heatwave period extend from May to the end of summer."
"An event that used to occur roughly once every ten years without human influence now happens three or four times per decade."
Switzerland is currently enduring its fourth hottest May since records began in 1864, with temperatures soaring a staggering 1.8°C above the historical norm. This isn't just a warm spell; it is a systemic shift. While the nation typically expects mild spring transitions, the mercury has already obliterated the 30°C mark across both sides of the Alps. In Sion, the capital of Valais, temperatures peaked at a blistering 34.2°C this Wednesday, transforming the alpine landscape into a furnace weeks ahead of schedule. This unseasonal surge mirrors a broader European 'heat dome' that has seen London hit 35.1°C and Southwest France reach 36°C. The speed and intensity of this warming are alarming, signaling that the traditional boundaries of summer have been breached. As the Swiss Plateau grapples with these early extremes, the data confirms a sobering reality: the climate we once knew is rapidly evaporating.
A critical rainfall deficit is strangling the Swiss landscape, with national precipitation levels reaching a mere 56% of their average values. This shortfall represents a massive deficit of nearly 150 millimetres, plunging regions like Graubünden and the Engadine into conditions reminiscent of the historic droughts of 1944 and 1976. In some areas, barely 40% of the expected rain fell this month, leaving the soil parched and the vegetation vulnerable. The Swiss government has been forced to intervene, issuing a Level 2 drought alert for the Alps and the eastern Plateau. While early May saw brief showers, they were utterly insufficient to compensate for the significant lack of moisture since March. This spring is now poised to be one of the driest since 1901, creating a volatile environment for agriculture and hydropower. The lack of water is no longer a future threat; it is an immediate crisis confronting the Swiss heartland.
The heat is not confined to the valleys; it is scaling the highest peaks of the Alps with unprecedented ferocity. On Whit Monday, the zero-degree isotherm—the altitude at which water freezes—surged to a staggering 4,328 metres. This is the third-highest level ever recorded in May, effectively placing almost every Swiss peak in a melting zone. Climatologists at MeteoSwiss warn that heat is arriving earlier, lasting longer, and reaching higher altitudes than ever before. This upward migration of warmth threatens the stability of permafrost and the longevity of Switzerland’s iconic glaciers. When the freezing line sits above 4,000 metres in May, the natural 'recharge' period for snowpack is decimated. The implications for winter tourism and water management are profound, as the 'zero-degree limit' is projected to climb another 550 metres by the end of the century. The mountains are quite literally losing their cool.
Switzerland is warming at double the global rate, a dramatic trend that ETH Zurich scientist Sonia Seneviratne warns is the 'new normal.' While the world has warmed by roughly 1.5°C, Switzerland has seen a 3°C surge. This accelerated warming means that extreme weather events, which once occurred once a decade, are now striking three or four times every ten years. We are witnessing the expansion of the heatwave season, which now stretches from the first blossoms of May through the end of summer. The Swiss climatologist emphasizes that Europe as a whole is warming faster than almost any other continent. Looking ahead, the forecast is clear: more frequent droughts, less winter snow, and more violent precipitation events. Switzerland must now brace for a future that is hotter, drier, and fundamentally more unpredictable. The early arrival of this May heat is not a fluke; it is a harbinger of a transformed climate reality.