Varmebølge lokker flere turister til Dalarna

En europæisk varmebølge har ført til flere udenlandske besøgende i Dalarna. Campingkæden First Camp melder om store stigninger fra flere lande.

Flere europæiske lande har oplevet høje temperaturer denne sommer. Samtidig har Dalarna tiltrukket flere turister, der søger mod køligere forhold.

Den tyske turist Beate Goetz, der camperer i Mora, fortæller, at det var meget varmt derhjemme, og at hun var glad for at kunne rejse afsted.

First Camp har set en tydelig stigning i antallet af gæster i uge 26 til 32 sammenlignet med samme periode i 2025. Østrig steg med 129 procent, Schweiz med 46 procent og Tyskland med 12 procent.

Administrerende direktør for Visit Dalarna, Johanna Hemming, bemærker, at flere faciliteter har observeret tendensen, men at det er for tidligt at tale om et boom. Hun understregede vigtigheden af at håndtere den øgede turisme med omhu for at beskytte miljøet.

Relaterede artikler

Heatwave in southern Sweden with fire warnings and drought conditions.
Billede genereret af AI

Heatwave reaches southern Sweden with warnings and fire bans

Rapporteret af AI Billede genereret af AI

SMHI has issued orange warnings for high temperatures in parts of Götaland. Fire bans are in place on Gotland, in Malmö and Lund due to drought and fire risk.

Dalarna's population grows by more than a quarter during the Midsummer weekend according to Statistics Sweden's analysis of mobile data.

Rapporteret af AI

Meteorologists forecast high summer heat this weekend with sun and temperatures up to 27 degrees in parts of Sweden.

High temperatures are expected in Uppsala over the weekend. Elderly care services have raised preparedness at homes such as Hasselparken.

Rapporteret af AI

Record temperatures have been measured across Europe during the ongoing heatwave. The World Health Organization reports over 1,300 excess deaths since June 21.

Western and central Europe is experiencing its hottest and most humid heatwave on record this week, with temperatures that would have been virtually impossible without climate change. The event, running from 26 to 28 June, is expected to cause thousands of deaths.

Rapporteret af AI

Malmö residents sought the sea during a hot weekend when temperatures reached 35.1 degrees.

 

 

 

Dette websted bruger cookies

Vi bruger cookies til analyse for at forbedre vores side. Læs vores privatlivspolitik for mere information.
Afvis