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Extreme weather grips Southeast Asia, impacting daily life

ANN/THE STRAIT TIMES – In Quezon City, a suburb of Manila in the Philippines, a seven-year-old Daryl Siongco had difficulty concentrating on his homework due to the intense heat inside his home on Tuesday. With temperature reaching 35 degrees Celsius (oC) outside, his public school had cancelled classes for the day due to the extreme weather.

This decision was particularly beneficial for Daryl, a second-grade student with asthma, who finds it increasingly difficult to endure the sweltering conditions of his classroom from March to May.

The room he shares with 39 classmates is inadequately cooled, equipped with only two electric fans to fend off the heat.

This discomfort during the peak summer months has led the Department of Education to offer schools the flexibility to conduct classes remotely or cancel them to avoid the heat’s worst effects. Additionally, there’s a broader movement underway to adjust the academic calendar.

After shifting the school year to run from August to May in 2020, a move intended to align the Philippines’ academic schedule with those of other countries, there’s now a push to return to the traditional June to March calendar.

This change comes after feedback from students and teachers about the challenges of academic activities during the hottest time of the year.

A child with his mother ar his home in Quenzon City, Manila in the Philippines. PHOTO: THE STRAIT TIMES

The recent spike in temperatures can be attributed to the El Niño phenomenon, which affects weather patterns across Southeast Asia by causing hotter and drier conditions.

This change is driven by variations in sea surface temperatures and wind patterns over the Pacific Ocean, impacting not just the comfort but also the education and well-being of students like Daryl.

Though the phenomenon has begun to weaken, it will continue to fuel above-average temperatures across the globe said the World Meteorological on March 5. Temperatures topped 40oC in parts of Thailand, Cambodia, Laos and Myanmar, while hitting at least 35oC in Malaysia, Indonesia and the Philippines in the week of March 17 to 23, latest data from the Climate Prediction Centre at the United States National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration showed.

In Singapore, several schools eased uniform regulations in late March to allow students to dress in their physical education attire until further notice, while a church in Vietnam’s Ho Chi Minh City has been helping others beat the heat by giving out free iced tea to passers-by.

However, a 22-year-old Malaysian man died of heatstroke in Pahang on February 2, and a total of 27 other heat-related cases have been reported in Malaysia in the first three months of 2024.

The National Disaster Management Agency and the Malaysian Armed Forces are now considering carrying out cloud seeding in certain areas to help deal with the heat.

Recurring bush fires have also been recorded in the states of Selangor, Johor and Sarawak, with the disaster management agency saying that the fire and rescue department plans to focus on more than 650 hot spots nationwide to prevent more bush fires from breaking out.

“To tackle the heat, do not expose yourself under the hot sun in the afternoon, especially in outdoor areas, stay away from rivers and waterfall areas due to sudden water surge from heavy rainfall,” said Malaysia’s Meteorological Department Deputy Director-General Mohd Hisham Anip.

Malaysian business owner Suzanna Said, 49, said residents in her area in Langkawi had to endure temperatures as high as 39oC in the past week.

“Due to the hot spell, we have also had bush fires. Luckily for me, my homestay business was not impacted because of repeat customers,” she said.

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