Germany has recorded a new temperature record today, just a day after recording its hottest day ever. The German Weather Service recorded 41.5°C in Drewitz, Saxony-Anhalt, beating the 41.3°C set the day before in Saarbrücken. Berlin broke its own record with 39.2°C at Tempelhof, prompting police to deploy water cannons - normally used for riot control - to mist citizens at Brandenburg Gate. They've already used 9,000 litres of water. Meanwhile, the Danish Meteorological Institute reported 37°C north of Aarhus, the highest since measurements began in 1874. Denmark's earlier record of 36.6°C north of Odense had already surpassed the 1975 record. Romania issued a red alert for extreme heat from Monday to Wednesday, joining Slovakia (which recorded its warmest night ever at 26.3°C), the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Moldova. In the UK, a teenager and two men drowned, bringing the heatwave's drowning toll to five. Experts warn Swiss glaciers could lose vast amounts of ice, with snow and ice expected to melt completely by Monday - the second-earliest glacier loss day on record. Scientists say the heatwave would have been virtually impossible without human-made climate change, making night-time temperatures 100 times more likely than two decades ago. More than 700 flights were delayed at Heathrow and Gatwick due to thunderstorms linked to the heat. Climate activists in Berlin plan a protest against the government's reliance on fossil fuels, because nothing says 'cool off' like a rally when it's still 32°C.