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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
World
Stephen Moss

Weatherwatch: why Atlantic Portugal has a ‘Mediterranean climate’

Praia da Rocha beach
Praia da Rocha beach in the Algarve, where temperatures regularly reach the low 30s in summer. Photograph: Michael Howard/Alamy

Despite not being on the Mediterranean, Portugal has what is termed a Mediterranean climate: warm (sometimes very hot), dry and sunny summers and cooler, wetter winters. Unlike countries further east, however, its climate is also affected by its long coastline facing the Atlantic Ocean, which moderates the average temperatures in both summer and winter.

As you might expect, heat and sunshine increase from north to south; hence the main holiday resorts are on the Algarve, the country’s southernmost region. Here, summer temperatures regularly reach the low 30s and sometimes even higher; while in Porto in the north, they are more likely to peak in the 20s. The capital, Lisbon, enjoys a climate somewhere between the two.

Surprisingly, perhaps, Portugal’s record high of 47.4C (117.3F) is the second highest in Europe, beaten only by Greece.

Rainfall, too, decreases considerably from north to south: the annual average in Porto is just under 1,300mm (50in); in Lisbon it is 775mm (30.5in); while in Faro it is just 500mm (19.6in) – making it technically semi-desert.

In winter, temperatures occasionally dip below freezing in the north, with snow falling on higher ground. The record low is -16C (3.2F), recorded on two occasions in the middle of the 20th century.

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