No relief from heat

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BENGALURU (AP) – Global temperatures dropped a minuscule amount after two days of record highs, making Tuesday only the world’s second-hottest day ever.

The European climate service Copernicus calculated that Tuesday’s global average temperature was 0.01 degrees Celsius (°C) lower than Monday’s all-time high of 17.16°C, which was 0.06°C hotter than Sunday.

All three days were hotter than Earth’s previous hottest day in 2023.

“The steady drumbeat of hottest-day-ever records and near-records is concerning for three main reasons. The first is that heat is a killer. The second is that the health impacts of heat waves become much more serious when events persist. The third is that the hottest-day records this year are a surprise,” said Stanford University climate scientist Chris Field.

Field said high temperatures usually occur during El Nino years – a natural warming of the equatorial Pacific that triggers weather extremes across the globe – but the last El Nino ended in April.

Field said these high temperatures “underscores the seriousness of the climate crisis”.

“This has been, I mean, probably the shortest-lived record ever,” Copernicus Director Carlo Buontempo said on Wednesday, after his agency calculated that Monday had beaten Sunday’s mark.

And he predicted that mark would also quickly fall. “We are in uncharted territory.”

Before July 3, 2023, the hottest day measured by Copernicus was 16.8°C on August 13, 2016. In the last 13 months that mark has now been beaten 59 times, according to Copernicus.

Humanity is now “operating in a world that is already much warmer than it was before,” Buontempo said.

“Unfortunately people are going to die and those deaths are preventable,” said public health and climate professor Kristie Ebi at the University of Washington.

“Heat is called the silent killer for a reason. People often don’t know they’re in trouble with heat until it’s too late.”

In past heat waves, including in 2021 in the Pacific Northwest, heat deaths didn’t start piling up until day two, Ebi said.

“At some point, the accumulated heat internally becomes too much, then your cells and your organs start to warm up,” Ebi said.

Last year, the United States had its most recorded heat deaths in more than 80 years, according to an Associated Press analysis of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data. The death certificates of more than 2,300 people mentioned excessive heat.

Heat killed 874 people in Arizona, 450 in Texas, 226 in Nevada, 84 in Florida and 83 in Louisiana.

Earlier this year, India witnessed prolonged heatwaves that resulted in the death of at least a 100 people.

However, health experts said heat deaths are likely undercounted in India and potentially other countries.

The “big driver” of the current heat is greenhouse gas emissions, from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas, Buontempo said.

Those gases help trap heat, changing the energy balance between the heat coming in from the sun and that escaping Earth, meaning the planet retains more heat energy than before, he said.

Other factors include the warming of the Pacific by El Nino; the sun reaching its peak cycle of activity; an undersea volcano explosion; and air with fewer heat-reflecting particles because of marine fuel pollution regulations, experts said.

The last 13 months have all set heat records. The world’s oceans broke heat records for 15 months in a row and that water heat, along with an unusually warm Antarctica, are helping push temperatures to record level, Buontempo said. “I wouldn’t be surprised to see Thursday, Friday and Saturday also set new warmest day records,” said climate scientist Andrew Weaver at the University of Victoria in Canada, which has been broiling in the warmth.

ABOVE & BELOW: People queue to fill their water bottles up from a public drinking tap in Madrid, Spain; and a woman rides a scooter past a thermometer that reads 46 degrees Celsius on a street of Seville. PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
ABOVE & BELOW: File photos show a worker unloading an ice block from a truck amid the ongoing heat wave in Dhaka, Bangladesh; and a worker crushing an ice block. PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
ABOVE & BELOW: File photos show a rescuer pouring water over a man’s head during heatwave in Karachi, Sindh province, southern Pakistan; and people transferring a man affected by a heatwave to a hospital in Karachi. PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA
People cool off at a fountain in the Madrid Rio park amid heatwave conditions in Madrid. PHOTO: AP, AFP & XINHUA