Scientists warn of unbearable heat waves ahead

Scientists warn of unbearable heat waves ahead The world has been experiencing an unprecedented number of heat waves as global warming continues to impact nations. Particularly over the summer, from California's Death Valley to the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent to sub-Saharan Africa, daily life
Ecology
October 29, 2021 08:49
Scientists warn of unbearable heat waves ahead

The world has been experiencing an unprecedented number of heat waves as global warming continues to impact nations. Particularly over the summer, from California's Death Valley to the Middle East, the Indian subcontinent to sub-Saharan Africa, daily life became unbearable for millions of people.

Report informs, citing foreign media, if nothing is done to slow climate change, the record temperatures and deadly heat waves it brings will only get worse, experts warn.

"Climate (change) is sort of steroids for the weather. It's loading the dice to make these sort of extreme events be more common," said Zeke Hausfather, a climate expert at the Breakthrough Institute in California.

The hottest place in the world is officially Death Valley, California. There too, temperatures are rising.

"If you look at the average temperature in Death Valley for a summer month (...) it has gotten much warmer in the last 20 years than it was before," said Abby Wines, spokesperson for the Death Valley National Park.

This summer, for the second year in a row, the area registered an astonishing 54.4 degrees Celsius (130 degrees Fahrenheit). If confirmed by the World Meteorological Organization, it would be the hottest temperature ever recorded with modern instruments.

According to the US climate agency NOAA, July 2021 was the hottest month ever recorded on Earth.

"We are affected a lot by this unbearable heat, and we poor are hit the hardest," said Kuldeep Kaur, a resident of Sri Ganganagar in the northern Indian state of Rajasthan, bordering Pakistan.

Half a world away in western Canada, where a so-called "heat dome" pushed temperatures above 40 degrees Celsius this summer, north Vancouver resident Rosa lamented: "It's just unbearable. It's impossible to be out."

Rising temperatures are a driving force behind more frequent and intense droughts, wildfires, storms and even floods. And the rising number of heat waves is devastating for farming and agriculture and potentially fatal for humans.

"A flood is a few deaths, maybe a few dozen. We're talking about thousands of deaths every time we have a very large extreme heatwave. And we know that these heatwaves are multiplying," said climatologist Robert Vautard, head of France's Pierre-Simon Laplace Institute.

, and to present clear, credible, long-term strategies to get there," said UN chief Antonio Guterres.

Latest news

Orphus sistemi