Switzerland has registered its hottest June day on record, with temperatures surpassing 37°C. The extreme heat is causing disruptions to national rail services and leading to an alarming rate of glacier melt, with Swiss glaciers facing a worse-case scenario.

"Prolonged heatwaves are the worst-case scenario for glaciers."
"Thatâs equivalent to filling an Olympic-sized swimming pool every six seconds, day and night."
Switzerland is burning through history as a relentless heatwave obliterates records that have stood for nearly eight decades. On Thursday, the mercury surged to a staggering 37.2°C at the Buchs-Aarau weather station, officially marking the hottest June day ever recorded in the Confederation. This unprecedented spike toppled the previous record of 36.9°C, which had remained unchallenged since 1947. The heat is not an isolated event; four different monitoring stationsâincluding Basel-Binningen and Beznauâall surpassed the 37°C threshold simultaneously. MeteoSwiss has issued its highest heat warning level across much of the country, as this continuous run of scorching days shows no signs of relenting until next week. This is no longer just a warm summer; it is a climate emergency manifesting in real-time across the Swiss plateau.
The Swiss Alps are witnessing a 'worst-case scenario' as 400 cubic metres of water per second gush from melting glaciers. This volume is equivalent to filling an Olympic-sized swimming pool every six seconds, a relentless torrent that continues day and night. Matthias Huss, head of GLAMOS, warns that while glaciers can withstand brief heat, a two-week sustained assault like the current June heatwave is catastrophic. The data is haunting: since the 1970s, more than 1,100 Swiss glaciers have vanished entirely. We are watching the literal liquefaction of the Swiss landscape. This 'massive' melting is occurring even at the highest peaks, where ice that has survived for millennia is now turning into runoff. The exceptional nature of this event surpasses even the brutal melt years of 2019 and 2022, signaling a permanent shift in alpine ecology.
The Swiss Federal Railways (SBB) is grappling with a physical reality: steel has its limits. As temperatures soar, the metal rails of the national network are expanding, threatening to warp and deform the very spine of Swiss transit. At Zurich main station, engineers were forced into emergency readjustments of track points to prevent derailment risks. The heat is not just attacking the tracks; it is suffocating the machinery. SBB reports a surge in traction motor failures and air-conditioning blackouts as rolling stock struggles to cool itself in the 37°C air. While the SBB has managed to maintain a stable schedule so far by rapidly replacing faulty trains, the infrastructure is being pushed to its thermal breaking point. This disruption serves as a stark reminder that our meticulously engineered systems were built for a climate that no longer exists.
Switzerland is warming at twice the global average, a terrifying geographic reality confirmed by the Swiss Academy of Science. Since 1864, the average temperature here has climbed by 1.8°C, while the rest of the world averaged a 0.9°C increase. Why is Switzerland the bullseye for global warming? As a landlocked nation, we lack the buffering influence of the oceans, which absorb and regulate heat. Instead, the Alps act as a thermal amplifier. As snow and ice vanish, the 'albedo effect'âthe land's ability to reflect sunlightâplummets, causing the exposed dark rock to absorb even more solar radiation. This feedback loop creates a self-sustaining furnace. Switzerland is no longer just observing climate change; it is the frontline. The implications for water security, tourism, and national identity are profound as the 'Water Tower of Europe' begins to run dry.