US west heatwave: 31m people brace for
record-breaking temperatures
Las Vegas could surpass its record-high of 117F as
residents of US west face very high risk of heat-related illness
Victoria
Bekiempis
Sat 10 Jul
2021 00.29 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jul/09/us-west-heatwave-california-nevada-record
More than
31 million people across the US west and south-west are bracing for a brutal
heatwave that could bring triple-digit temperatures this weekend, with
authorities warning that records could be broken in many regions of California
and Nevada. Officials have said that Las Vegas could even surpass its
record-high temperature of 117F (47C).
The “heat
risk” is classified as “very high” across much of this area, meaning all
residents there face “very high risk of heat-related illness due to both the
long duration heat, and the lack of overnight relief”, the National Weather
Service (NWS) has said.
While the
heat risk is slightly lower in places at higher elevations – classified as
“high” or “moderate” – most of the population remains at risk for heat-related
illnesses, especially persons “who are sensitive to heat and/or those without
adequate cooling or hydration,” according to the NWS.
In
California, inland areas are expected to reel from the heatwave. The state’s
largest urban centers, including Los Angeles and San Francisco, are along the
coast, so they will see benefits from ocean cooling, and not endure the extreme
highs.
“Temperatures
are going to be about 10 degrees above normal for this time of year,” Diana
Crofts-Pelayo, a spokesperson for California’s office of emergency services,
said earlier this week. “This will be a record-setting heatwave.”
This
heatwave comes in the wake of record highs across Pacific north-west states and
western Canada last week. The heat-related death toll in Oregon and Washington
has risen to a total of nearly 200 people; as many as 500 persons are believed
to have died in British Columbia.
On Friday,
officials in Washington state announced emergency rules that provide farm
workers and others who work outdoors more protection from hot weather. Under
the new rules, when the temperature is at or above 100F (38C), employers must
provide shade or another way for employees to cool down and ensure a paid
cool-down rest period of at least 10 minutes every two hours.
“The heat
experienced in our state this year has reached catastrophic levels,” the
Washington governor, Jay Inslee, said. “The physical risk to individuals is
significant, in particular those whose occupations have them outdoors all day.”
Officials
are urging residents to stay inside, seek air conditioning, and drink water;
some counties are opening cooling centers. The California Independent System
Operator, which runs most of this state’s power grid, has asked residents to
conserve power in the evening on Friday to lessen stress on the electrical
system, citing “extreme heat forecasted across much of California into early
next week”.
The US west
and south-west were also gripped by a heatwave in June, with at least 48
million under a heat advisory. The dangerous heat is also coupled with extreme
drought conditions, ramping up the already heightened risk of wildfires.
California’s
wildfire season is already more extreme than in 2020. Officials say the length
of fire season has increased by 75 days across the Sierras, in keeping with an
uptick in the extent of forest fires statewide.
According
to Weather.com, there have been 4,599 wildfires that started in California
since 1 January, igniting 115 sq miles (30,000ha). In the same period of 2020,
there were 3,847 fires burning 48.6 sq miles.
On Friday,
the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration announced that June 2021
was “the hottest” on record for the US. The Noaa says that “heatwaves from
coast to coast helped push” June over the top.
The average
June temperature across the contiguous US hit 72.6F (22.5C), 4.2F over average.
Noaa says that Arizona, California, Idaho, Massachusetts, Nevada, New
Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Utah experienced their hottest June on record.
The Associated Press contributed reporting
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