Moscow breaks heat record: one hundred twenty nine years of climate history

Published on May 24, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The Russian capital recorded an unprecedented temperature since 1894, surpassing the previous historical record. The thermometer reached exceptional levels for the season, raising alarms among experts who link this phenomenon to global climate change. Residents sought refuge in parks and fountains to endure the sweltering conditions, highlighting a pattern of increasingly intense heatwaves in the region.

Moscow cityscape heatwave scene, old thermometer displaying record-breaking mercury column above normal summer level, people fanning themselves near fountains in a park, digital weather station showing extreme temperature data, historical climate graphs on a tablet screen being compared to current readings, solar radiation intensifying over concrete buildings, heat haze distorting distant skyscrapers, scientific visualization of urban heat island effect with red thermal overlay, cinematic photorealistic style, dramatic golden-hour lighting, sweat droplets on skin, wilted leaves on trees, ultra-detailed architectural background, realistic atmospheric perspective, technical climate documentation aesthetic

Climate technology: sensors and heatwave prediction 🌡️

Current weather monitoring systems use IoT sensor networks and artificial intelligence models to predict these extreme events. Low-orbit satellites and ground stations record real-time data, feeding algorithms that analyze atmospheric patterns. However, accuracy remains limited for anticipating historical records like this one, necessitating improvements in early warning infrastructure in cities such as Moscow.

Moscow is melting: polar bears are asking for air conditioning 🐻‍❄️

While Muscovites cool off in public fountains, the local zoo's polar bears eye store fans with envy. Some citizens are already proposing installing mini-splits on Lenin's statues, and ice cream vendors report record profits, even surpassing those of vodka. The heat is so extreme that even matryoshkas are sweating and samovars are begging for a break.