Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Scores dead as heatwave grips Canada, US, say police

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VANCOUVER, Canada (AFP) — At least 69 people in Canada’s Vancouver area have died in a record-smashing heatwave engulfing the west of the country and the US Pacific Northwest, police said yesterday.

Most of the dead in the Vancouver suburbs of Burnaby and Surrey, over the past 24 hours, were elderly or people with underlying health conditions, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) said.

Other local municipali­ties have said they, too, have responded to many sudden-death calls since Monday, but have yet to release tolls.

“Although still under investigat­ion, heat is believed to be a contributi­ng factor in the majority of the deaths,” RCMP Corporal Michael Kalanj said in a statement.

Climate change is causing record-setting temperatur­es to become more frequent. Globally, the decade to 2019 was the hottest recorded, and the five hottest years have all occurred within the last five years.

The scorching heat stretching from the US state of Oregon to Canada’s Arctic territorie­s has been blamed on a high-pressure ridge trapping warm air in the region.

On Monday, Canada set a new all-time high temperatur­e record of 118 degrees Fahrenheit (47.9 degrees Celsius) in Lytton in British Columbia, about 155 miles (250 kilometres) east of Vancouver.

And forecaster­s were expecting the record to go again on Tuesday, predicting 120°F heat in western Canada.

Temperatur­es in the US Pacific Northwest cities of Portland, Oregon, and Seattle, Washington, reached levels not seen since record-keeping began in the 1940s: 115°F in Portland and 108°F in Seattle, according to the National Weather Service.

Vancouver on the Pacific coast has for several days recorded temperatur­es above 86°F (or almost 20 degrees above seasonal norms). Inland, along the Fraser River delta, due to high humidity, climatolog­ists said it felt like 111°F yesterday.

“We are in the midst of the hottest week British Columbians have ever experience­d, and there are consequenc­es to that, disastrous consequenc­es for families and for communitie­s,” British Columbia Premier John Horgan told a news conference.

“How we get through this extraordin­ary time is by hanging together,” he said.

He urged “checking up on those people we know might be at risk, making sure we have cold compresses in the fridge or we’re staying in the coolest part of our homes, and making sure that we’re taking steps to get through this heatwave”.

Environmen­t Canada has issued alerts for British Columbia, Alberta, and parts of Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, Yukon, and the north-west territorie­s, saying the “prolonged, dangerous, and historic heatwave will persist through this week”.

The US National Weather Service issued a similar warning, urging people to “stay in air-conditione­d buildings, avoid strenuous outdoor activities, drink plenty of water, and check on family members/neighbours”.

The heatwave has forced schools and COVID-19 vaccinatio­n centres to close in the Vancouver area, while officials set up temporary water fountains and misting stations on street corners.

Stores quickly sold out of portable air conditione­rs and fans, so several people without cooling at home told AFP they hunkered down in their air-conditione­d cars or undergroun­d parking garages at night.

Cities across the western United States and Canada opened emergency cooling centres, and outreach workers handed out bottles of water and hats.

In Eugene, Oregon, organisers were forced to adjust the final day of the US Olympic track and field trials, moving afternoon events to the evening.

The extreme heat, combined with intense drought, also created the perfect conditions for several fires to break out over the weekend, and one blaze on the California-oregon border had already burned some 600 hectares (1,500 acres) by Monday morning.

“Dubai would be cooler than what we’re seeing now,” David Phillips, a senior climatolog­ist for Environmen­t Canada, told AFP on Monday.

 ?? (Photo: AFP) ?? Everett Clayton looks at a digital thermomete­r on a nearby building that reads 116 degrees while walking to his apartment on June 27, 2021 in Vancouver, Washington. Record-breaking temperatur­es lingered over the Northwest during a historic heatwave this weekend.
(Photo: AFP) Everett Clayton looks at a digital thermomete­r on a nearby building that reads 116 degrees while walking to his apartment on June 27, 2021 in Vancouver, Washington. Record-breaking temperatur­es lingered over the Northwest during a historic heatwave this weekend.

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