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Home / World

At nearly 46C, heat in Canada shatters national record

By Vjosa Isai and Dan Bilefsky
New York Times·
28 Jun, 2021 08:27 PM5 mins to read

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Everett Clayton looks at a digital thermometer that reads 116 degrees Fahrenheit (46.6C) while walking to his apartment in Vancouver. Photo / Getty Images

Everett Clayton looks at a digital thermometer that reads 116 degrees Fahrenheit (46.6C) while walking to his apartment in Vancouver. Photo / Getty Images

The heat is expected to continue for several days in some parts of British Columbia, according to weather warnings from the government.

Vancouverites were frying eggs on pans placed on their terraces.

One man checked into an air-conditioned five-star hotel, after the five fans aimed at his bed at home and the seventh cold shower failed to bring relief.

Lettuce plants shrivelled in the Okanagan Valley, British Columbia's picturesque wine region. Flowers wilted. People wilted.

The heat wave across western Canada has much of a country known for its sweater weather sweating.

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Canada broke a national heat record Sunday when the temperature in a small town in British Columbia reached almost 46.6C, breaking an 84-year-old record, with dangerously hot weather expected to continue for several more days.

"This is a complete shock to a Canadian — this feels like Las Vegas or India — not Vancouver," said Chris Johnson, a criminal lawyer who Monday was heading to an air-conditioned hotel room as temperatures inside his home reached 32C.

Tying any one weather event to climate change requires extensive attribution analysis, but heat waves around the world are growing more frequent, longer-lasting and more dangerous, experts say. David Phillips, senior climatologist at Environment Canada, a government agency, said the early timing of this one, its intensity and its duration, could all be attributable to rising global temperatures.

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"It's our grandparents' heat waves, but it's different now because of the human component," Phillips said, referring to climate change, and the well-documented effects of human behavior like carbon emissions on the planet.

Phillips pointed to the public health dangers of having heat extend overnight. "We know that nighttime temperatures, that's where people die from heat waves," he said.

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At a time when many Canadians have finally been enjoying the summer amid the easing of coronavirus restrictions and newly opened restaurant terraces, beaches and parks, scorching temperatures have added another public health burden. Now, the authorities must also contend with both the relaxed rules and trying to keep residents cool.

Canadians are not alone in feeling overheated. The same high-pressure system baking the region has also produced record-breaking heat in the northwestern United States, including 44C Sunday in Portland, Oregon.

People cool off in a water fountain in Portland after temperatures reach over 43C. Photo / AP
People cool off in a water fountain in Portland after temperatures reach over 43C. Photo / AP

Emily Jubenvill, co-owner and manager at Enderberry Farm, a farm that produces organic vegetables in the northern Okanagan Valley, said she and her husband were planning to beat the heat by getting to the fields at 3am Tuesday to pick vegetables. "Things are maturing faster under the stress of the heat, and so we're not able to harvest as much," she said, noting that the flavour of vegetables like lettuce could turn extremely bitter if exposed to very hot weather.

Canada's former national heat record was 45 degrees Celsius, or 113 degrees Fahrenheit, but Sunday, Lytton, a town of fewer than 300 about three hours east of Vancouver, reached 115.9 degrees Fahrenheit (46.6C), according to Environment Canada.

Other towns in southern British Columbia, including Victoria, Kamloops and Kelowna, are breaking local records under the high-pressure heat dome, and temperatures well over 37C are forecast through Wednesday.

Previously, Midale and Yellow Grass, both in rural Saskatchewan, held the record in Canada for the highest temperature on July 5, 1937, at 45C.

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Western Canada's "desert heat" is in contrast to the sultry "jungle heat" seen in eastern parts of the country, akin to temperatures and humidity felt in Florida or the Gulf of Mexico, said Phillips, the climatologist.

According to the 2018 National Climate Assessment, a scientific report by 13 US federal agencies, heat waves have climbed from two per year in the 1960s to six per year by the 2010s. The season for heat waves has also grown 45 days longer than it was in the 1960s, the report notes.

It is all part of an overall warming trend: The seven warmest years in the history of accurate worldwide record-keeping have been the last seven years, and 19 of the 20 warmest years have occurred since 2000. An analysis from the Copernicus Climate Change Service, a group of European climate researchers, found that the hottest year on record was 2020, tied with 2016.

Several school districts in British Columbia were closed Monday, given that many buildings are not fitted with air conditioning. Temperatures rarely go above 30 in Vancouver, Phillips said.

British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority, a state-owned utilities company, saw back-to-back record-breaking electricity use Saturday and Sunday, with some local power outages reported across the system, the Provincial Crown corporation said in a news release Monday.

On social media, people posted photographs of their pets cooling off with ice packs, putting out water trays for birds or avoiding the sun altogether.

In a weather alert for Metro Vancouver Monday, Environment Canada warned that temperatures could reach as high as 43.8C during the day.

"The duration of this heat wave is concerning as there is little relief at night with elevated overnight temperatures," it wrote, advising local residents to navigate the "record-breaking heat" by drinking plenty of water and avoiding leaving people and pets in a parked vehicle.

It also advised residents to watch out for the symptoms of heat illness such as dizziness, fainting, nausea and decreased urination.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.


Written by: Vjosa Isai and Dan Bilefsky
© 2021 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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