Moscow heatwave breaks 29-year record
Temperatures in the capital hit 35 degrees Celsius (95 degrees Fahrenheit) for the first time since 1981, said the Fobos weather forecasting centre, which provides weather data for the country's top media outlets.
Environmental groups including Greenpeace say Russia's heatwave is evidence of global warming, but forecasters with the national weather centre have said it is too early to draw a direct link.
"The great drought continues," Fobos' Gismeteo.ru weather website said, warning there was little chance of temperatures in the capital falling in the next few days.
Moscow's all-time high of 36.6 degrees Celsius, registered in 1936, could be broken on Saturday, state TV news channel Rossiya-24 reported. It said temperatures could hit 40 by the end of the week.
Moscow's capital, which is more accustomed to temperatures of minus 35 Celsius (minus 31 degrees Fahrenheit), has struggled to deal with the heat, with most electronics retailers selling out of fans and air conditioners.
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