Marina Alta Exceeds 30 Degrees as Extraordinary Heat Episode Begins

Temperatures, typical of mid-summer, will persist through the rest of May and the first week of June, according to Aemet.

Thermometer showing over 30 degrees Celsius in a dry Mediterranean landscape under intense sun.
IA

Thermometer showing over 30 degrees Celsius in a dry Mediterranean landscape under intense sun.

The Marina Alta region has recorded temperatures exceeding 30 degrees Celsius, signaling the beginning of an extraordinary heat episode anticipated to continue for the coming weeks.

Marina Alta has entered what meteorological institutes are identifying as the first episode of high temperatures, more characteristic of summer, still within May. This phenomenon, which began yesterday in the peninsular southwest, is already being felt in this region and could last for approximately three weeks.
For the remainder of the week, an episode of extraordinarily high temperatures for this time of year is expected across the peninsula. Widespread maximums could reach 34ºC in the main valleys, and even 36-38ºC in the Guadiana and Guadalquivir valleys.
Indeed, this Thursday temperatures surpassed 30 degrees, with 30.2ºC recorded at the Patronat meteorological station in Pedreguer, according to Avamet data. Other municipalities neared 29ºC, such as El Ràfol d’Almúnia (29.7), Parcent (29.4), Sagra (29.2), or Dénia (29.0).
The State Meteorological Agency (Aemet) has reported on the high temperatures forecast, clarifying that it is not technically a heatwave. According to the agency, for it to be considered a heatwave, even higher temperatures would need to be reached and maintained for several days, exceeding the 95th percentile of historical July and August data.
Nevertheless, Aemet indicates that the thermal values for the coming days, both daytime and nighttime, will be "typical of mid-summer." "An episode of extraordinarily high temperatures for this time of year is expected," it states.
Instability and heat will be the main features for the remainder of May and the first week of June, as a result of an anticyclone and the arrival of a warm air mass, according to MeteoParcent.