Weather - Changeable June weather in Lower Saxony and Bremen
June showed a fluctuating side in Germany, according to a preliminary balance of the German Weather Service (DWD), from the Friday of last month. In Lower Saxony, for example, temperatures reached values around 15 degrees Celsius in the first half of the month, but climbed above 30 degrees in the second half. The average temperature was then 16.1 degrees Celsius, 0.7 degrees above the average value of the internationally valid reference period 1961-1990. With an average of 80 liters per square meter, 4 liters more rain fell than in the comparison period. And with 200 sunshine hours, Niedersachsen was exactly at the average. However, the UV radiation was so intense in the last days of the month that the DWD issued a warning.
Bremen also remained relatively cool with maximum temperatures below 20 degrees Celsius in the first half of the month. However, temperatures rose to up to 30 degrees Celsius at the end of the month. With an average temperature of 16.1 degrees Celsius, values in the Hanseatic city were 0.6 degrees above those of the reference period 1961-1990. According to DWD statements, the average precipitation in Bremen in June was 10 liters more than in the comparison period with a total of 83 liters per square meter. The sun shone in Bremen for approximately 195 hours. In the comparison period, it was sunnier with 204 hours.
The average temperatures were slightly lower in Bremen and Lower Saxony than the nationwide average of 16.8 degrees Celsius. In terms of sunshine hours, it was slightly less nationwide with a total of 210 hours.
The German Weather Service (DWD) reported that Bremen, like Lower Saxony, experienced a fluctuating weather pattern in June. Bremen's average temperature of 16.1 degrees Celsius in June was slightly above the 1961-1990 reference period, just like the temperatures in Lower Saxony. The DWD also noted that Bremen received slightly more rainfall in June than its usual comparison period, aligning with the extra precipitation experienced in Lower Saxony.