Eastern
US swelters from heatwave as high temperatures affect half of country
Heat and
humidity are stretching east from the Mississippi River valley, and some areas
could see heat indices of 120F
Marina
Dunbar
Mon 28
Jul 2025 21.46 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2025/jul/28/us-weather-heatwave-temperatures-east
The
eastern half of the US is facing a significant heatwave, with more than 185
million people under warnings due to intense and widespread heat conditions on
Monday.
The
south-east is likely to endure the most dangerous temperatures as the extreme
heat spread across the region on Monday, spanning from the Carolinas through
Florida. In these areas, heat index values (how hot it feels once humidity is
accounted for) are forecast to range between 105 and 113F (40.5 to 45C).
Some
locations in Mississippi and Louisiana face an even greater threat, with the
heat index possibly soaring as high as 120F (49C).
Meanwhile,
the midwest isn’t escaping the heat. Conditions there remain hazardous into
Monday and Tuesday, after a weekend in which temperatures felt as if they were
between 97 and 111F (36 to 44C) in areas from Lincoln, Nebraska, north to
Minneapolis.
Cities
such as Des Moines, St Louis, Memphis, New Orleans, Jacksonville and Raleigh
are under extreme heat warnings. In these locations, temperatures will climb
into the mid-90s and low 100s, with heat indices potentially reaching 110 to
115F.
The most
dangerous conditions, classified as level 4 out of 4 on the heat risk scale,
encompass much of Florida and extend north into Georgia and the Carolinas. A
broader level 3 zone stretches from the eastern plains through the midwest and
into the mid-Atlantic. This follows a weekend already dominated by extreme
temperatures.
Tampa
experienced an unprecedented milestone on Sunday when it reached 100F (37.8C).
Other cities also broke daily temperature records, and more are expected to
follow suit.
The
dangerous heat and humidity are expected to persist through midweek, affecting
major metropolitan areas including St Louis, Memphis, Charlotte, Savannah,
Tampa and Jackson, Mississippi. Actual air temperatures will climb into the
upper 90s and low 100s, while heat index readings are expected to remain
between 105 and 115F for several days due to high tropical moisture.
Relief
will be hard to find, even during the night. Overnight and early morning
temperatures are forecast to dip only into the 70s or above, keeping conditions
uncomfortable around the clock.
However,
a cold front moving in later this week is expected to bring a drop in
temperatures across the eastern US, offering a much-needed break from the
extreme heat by the weekend.
Elsewhere,
triple-digit temperatures will dominate the central US. The combination of
soaring heat and dense humidity in the Mississippi River valley and central
plains could make conditions especially hazardous, with some areas possibly
seeing the heat index reach 120F.
Data
suggests that there are more than 1,300 deaths per year in the US due to
extreme heat, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. While no one
single weather event can be blamed on the global climate crisis, the warming
world is experiencing a greater frequency of extreme weather incidents.
According
to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (Noaa), excessive heat
is already the leading cause of weather-related deaths in the US, and the
problem is only intensifying. For vulnerable populations, such as migrants,
prisoners or schoolchildren in under-cooled buildings, the burden of rising
temperatures is compounded.
Despite
the increasingly crucial need to find solutions for the rising temperatures,
many US agencies are currently understaffed due to cuts from the Trump
administration and the so-called “department of government efficiency” (Doge).
Federal
science agencies such as Noaa are now operating at reduced capacity despite the
outsized weather threats. Hundreds of meteorologists have left the National
Weather Service in recent months, and several offices, including Houston, have
had to scale back the services they provide.

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