Sweltering cities
Halfway to boiling: the city at 50C
In a city at 50C, the
only people in sight are those who do not have access to air conditioning.
Illustration: Kevin Whipple
It is the temperature at which human cells start to cook,
animals suffer and air conditioners overload power grids. Once an urban
anomaly, 50C is fast becoming reality
by Jonathan Watts and Elle Hunt
Cities is supported by
Rockefeller FoundationAbout this content
Mon 13 Aug 2018 06.00 BST https://www.theguardian.com/cities/2018/aug/13/halfway-boiling-city-50c
Imagine a city at 50C (122F). The pavements are empty, the
parks quiet, entire neighbourhoods appear uninhabited. Nobody with a choice
ventures outside during daylight hours. Only at night do the denizens emerge,
HG Wells-style, into the streets – though, in temperatures that high, even
darkness no longer provides relief. Uncooled air is treated like effluent: to
be flushed as quickly as possible.
School playgrounds are silent as pupils shelter inside. In
the hottest hours of the day, working outdoors is banned. The only people in
sight are those who do not have access to air conditioning, who have no escape
from the blanket of heat: the poor, the homeless, undocumented labourers.
Society is divided into the cool haves and the hot have-nots.
Those without the option of sheltering indoors can rely only
on shade, or perhaps a water-soaked sheet hung in front of a fan. Construction
workers, motor-rickshaw drivers and street hawkers cover up head to toe to stay
cool. The wealthy, meanwhile, go from one climate-conditioned environment to
another: homes, cars, offices, gymnasiums, malls.
Asphalt heats up 10-20C higher than the air. You really
could fry an egg on the pavement. A dog’s paws would blister on a short walk,
so pets are kept behind closed doors. There are fewer animals overall; many
species of mammals and birds have migrated to cooler environments, perhaps at a
higher altitude – or perished. Reptiles, unable to regulate their body
temperatures or dramatically expand their range, are worst placed to adapt.
Even insects suffer.
Maybe in the beginning, when it was just a hot spell, there
was a boom in spending as delighted consumers snapped up sunglasses, bathing
suits, BBQs, garden furniture and beer. But the novelty quickly faded when
relentless sunshine became the norm. Consumers became more selective. Power
grids are overloaded by cooling units. The heat is now a problem.
The temperature is recalibrating behaviour. Appetites tend
to fade as the body avoids the thermal effect of food and tempers are quicker
to flare – along, perhaps, with crime and social unrest. But eventually
lethargy sets in as the body shuts down and any prolonged period spent outdoors
becomes dangerous.
Hospitals see a surge in admissions for heat stress,
respiratory problems and other illnesses exacerbated by high temperatures. Some
set up specialist wards. The elderly, the obese and the sick are most at risk.
Deaths rise.
At 50C – halfway to water’s boiling point and more than 10C
above a healthy body temperature – heat becomes toxic. Human cells start to
cook, blood thickens, muscles lock around the lungs and the brain is choked of
oxygen. In dry conditions, sweat – the body’s in-built cooling system – can
lessen the impact. But this protection weakens if there is already moisture in
the air.
A so-called “wet-bulb temperature” (which factors in
humidity) of just 35C can be fatal after a few hours to even the fittest
person, and scientists warn climate change will make such conditions
increasingly common in India, Pakistan, south-east Asia and parts of China.
Even under the most optimistic predictions for emissions reductions, experts
say almost half the world’s population will be exposed to potentially deadly
heat for 20 days a year.
Not long ago, 50C was considered an anomaly, but it is
increasingly widespread. Earlier this year, the 1.1 million residents of
Nawabshah, Pakistan, endured the hottest April ever recorded on Earth, as
temperatures hit 50.2C. In neighbouring India two years earlier, the town of
Phalodi sweltered in 51C – the country’s hottest ever day.
Dev Niyogi, chair of the Urban Environment department at the
American Meteorological Society, witnessed how cities were affected by extreme
heat on a research trip to New Delhi and Pune during that 2015 heatwave in
India, which killed more than 2,000 people.
“You could see the physical change. Road surfaces started to
melt, neighbourhoods went quiet because people didn’t go out and water vapour
rose off the ground like a desert mirage,” he recalls.
“We must hope that we don’t see 50C. That would be uncharted
territory. Infrastructure would be crippled and ecosystem services would start
to break down, with long-term consequences.”
Pilgrims taking part
in the Hajj in Mecca walk down a road with a water spray cooling system, part of
an increasingly sophisticated support system required to beat the heat.
Hajj pilgrims in Mecca are sprayed with cool water
Several cities in the Persian Gulf are getting increasingly
accustomed to such heat. Basra – population 2.1 million – registered 53.9C two
years ago. Kuwait City and Doha have experienced 50C or more in the past
decade. At Quriyat, on the coast of Oman, overnight temperatures earlier this
summer remained above 42.6C, which is believed to be the highest “low”
temperature ever recorded in the world.
At Mecca, the two million hajj pilgrims who visit each year
need ever more sophisticated support to beat the heat. On current trends, it is
only a matter of time before temperatures exceed the record 51.3C reached in
2012. Last year, traditionalists were irked by plans to install what are
reportedly the world’s biggest retractable umbrellas to provide shade on the
courtyards and roof of the Great Mosque. Air conditioners weighing 25 tonnes
have been brought in to ventilate four of the biggest tents. Thousands of fans
already cool the marble floors and carpets, while police on horseback spray the
crowds with water.
The blast of furnace-like heat ... literally feels
life-threatening and apocalyptic
Professor Nigel Tapper
Football supporters probably cannot expect such treatment at
the Qatar World Cup in 2022, and many may add to the risks of hyperthermia and
dehydration by taking off their shirts and drinking alcohol. Fifa is so
concerned about conditions that it has moved the final from summer to a week
before Christmas. Heat is also why Japanese politicians are now debating
whether to introduce daylight saving time for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics so that
marathon and racewalk athletes can start at what is currently 5am and avoid
mid-afternoon temperatures that recently started to pass 40C with humidity of
more than 80%.
At the Australian open in Melbourne this year – when ambient
temperatures reached 40C – players were staggering around like “punch-drunk
boxers” due to heatstroke. Even walking outside can feel oppressive at higher
temperatures. “The blast of furnace-like heat ... literally feels
life-threatening and apocalyptic,” says Nigel Tapper, professor of
environmental science at Melbourne’s Monash University, of the 48C recorded in
parts of the city. “You cannot move outside for more than a few minutes.”
The feeling of foreboding is amplified by the increased
threat of bush and forest fires, he adds. “You cannot help but ask, ‘How can
this city operate under these conditions? What can we do to ensure that the
city continues to provide important services for these conditions? What can we
do to reduce temperatures in the city?’”
Those places already struggling with extreme heat are doing
what they can. In Ahmedabad, in Gujarat, hospitals have opened specialist heat
wards. Australian cities have made swimming pools accessible to the homeless
when the heat creeps above 40C, and instructed schools to cancel playground
time. In Kuwait, outside work is forbidden between noon and 4pm when
temperatures soar.
But many regulations are ignored, and companies and
individuals underestimate the risks. In almost all countries, hospital
admissions and death rates tend to rise when temperatures pass 35C – which is
happening more often, in more places. Currently, 354 major cities experience
average summer temperatures in excess of 35C; by 2050, climate change will push
this to 970, according to the recent “Future We Don’t Want” study by the C40
alliance of the world’s biggest metropolises. In the same period, it predicts
the number of urban dwellers exposed to this level of extreme heat will
increase eightfold, to 1.6 billion.
As baselines shift across the globe, 50C is also
uncomfortably near for tens of millions more people. This year, Chino, 50km (30
miles) from Los Angeles, hit a record of 48.9C, Sydney saw 47C, and Madrid and
Lisbon also experienced temperatures in the mid-40s. New studies suggest France
“could easily exceed” 50C by the end of the century while Australian cities are
forecast to reach this point even earlier. Kuwait, meanwhile, could sizzle
towards an uninhabitable 60C.
How to cool dense populations is now high on the political
and academic agenda, says Niyogi, who last week co-chaired an urban climate
symposium in New York. Cities can be modified to deplete heat through measures
to conserve water, create shade and deflect heat. In many places around the
world, these steps are already under way.
The city at 50C could be more tolerable with lush green
spaces on and around buildings; towers with smart shades that follow the
movement of the sun; roofs and pavements painted with high-albedo surfaces; fog
capture and renewable energy fields to provide cooling power without adding to
the greenhouse effect.
But with extremes creeping up faster than baselines, Niyogi
says this adapting will require changes not just to the design of cities, but
how they are organised and how we live in them. First, though, we have to see
what is coming – which might not hit with the fury of a flood or typhoon but
can be even more destructive.
“Heat is different,” says Niyogi. “You don’t see the
temperature creep up to 50C. It can take people unawares.”
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