Extreme early-summer heatwave peaks in western US
NEW YORK, NEW YORK – JUNE 03: People ride the Staten Island Ferry on a warm late spring afternoon on June 03, 2024 in New York City. As temperatures around the world continue to break yearly heat records, New York City is planning ahead for extreme heat. In one initiative, the New York City Parks Department has planted a record number of trees, 15,000 so far, in neighborhoods that are most at risk from excessive heat. (Getty Images via AFP)
Worse to come
The ridge of high pressure has swept in from Mexico, which has been withering under a punishing heatwave. Late last month Mexico City — which sits 7,350 feet (2,240 meters) above sea level and has traditionally enjoyed a temperate climate — logged its highest ever temperatures. Officials say dozens of people have died in repeated heatwaves that have scorched the country, with hundreds of others sickened. Experts say there could be worse to come. This year is on course to be “the warmest year in history,” Francisco Estrada, coordinator of the Climate Change Research Program at the National Autonomous University of Mexico, has warned. Human-caused climate change is heating up the planet at an alarming rate, the global scientific community agrees. Humanity now faces an 80 percent chance that Earth’s temperatures will at least temporarily exceed the key 1.5-degree Celsius mark during the next five years, the UN predicted Wednesday. The report came alongside another by the EU’s Copernicus Climate Change Service announcing that last month was the hottest May on record, pointing to human-induced climate change — and spurring UN chief Antonio Guterres to compare humanity’s impact on the world to “the meteor that wiped out the dinosaurs”. Dramatic climate shifts have begun taking a heavy toll worldwide, fuelling extreme weather events, flooding and drought, while glaciers are rapidly melting away and sea levels are rising. The year 2023 was the hottest on record, according to the European Union’s climate monitor, Copernicus. And 2024 is not shaping up to be any better, with Pakistan, India and China already walloped by extreme temperatures.
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