Gulf News

At 114 degrees, it’s an all- time March record

As parts of Asia roast, Pakistan’s northeast sawthe hottest weather

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Searing spring heat ripped across parts of Asia in the last days of March, and we now know many of the extraordin­arily high temperatur­es were indeed records for the month in at least seven countries.

The most incredible record was Pakistan’s, where it’s never been so hot this early in the season. The late- March heat wave was expected to severely affect Karachi, the capital of the Pakistani province of Sindh.

Temperatur­es rose well above average in the city, but the hottest weather was measured to the northeast. The temperatur­e soared to 113.9 degrees in the city of Nawabshah in Sindh on March 30. The next day, Moenjo Daro, also in Sindh, reached the same temperatur­e. Moenjo Daro currently holds Pakistan’s all- time hottest temperatur­e record, 128.3 degrees in May 2010.

When winds shifted to come out of the southwest, it pushed temperatur­es in northern India well above average. Delhi soared to 99 degrees last week, which local forecaster­s said was the hottest so far this season.

In Iraq, the high temperatur­e was 110.8 degrees on March 29, which blasted past the former record 108.3 degrees set in 2010.

The World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on does not track monthly records, but they do investigat­e and confirm more significan­t records, like continenta­l high and low temperatur­es.

Even so, Randall Cerveny, the WMO’s chief rapporteur of weather and climate extremes, says hewill be watching this region carefully in the next few months.

“The recent huge North African and European dust storms are indicative in part of howhot and dry some parts of North Africa and the Middle East have already become,” Cerveny told The Washington Post. “We will definitely be keeping an eye on those areas for potential record- breaking continenta­l or perhaps even global temperatur­es as we move into summer.”

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