The National - News

Northern hemisphere vies with UAE’s summer heat

- JAMES LANGTON

It’s summer and it’s hot. Pushing into the mid-40s, plus humidity. We know that. We live in the UAE.

Spare a thought though, for the Canadian province of Quebec. In cities such as Montreal the population effectivel­y hibernates for months, shopping in undergroun­d malls to escape the cold.

This week, temperatur­es in Quebec have felt like the mid40s with humidity. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to tweet: “My thoughts are with the loved ones of those who have died in Quebec during this heatwave.”

At least 18 deaths are attributed to this spell of hot weather, all in older age groups. But people do not usually die from the heat in Canada, where it drops to –50°C in some parts and the city of Saguenay in Quebec has an average temperatur­e of 8.2°C all year.

In Saguenay last Thursday it was 36°C. The city’s title of the lowest daily maximum temperatur­e in all Canada is at risk.

It is hot all over the northern hemisphere this month. The UK is experienci­ng what is sometime called barbecue weather, as evidenced by the photograph­s of Dr Sheikh Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, the Ruler of Sharjah, wielding a kebab over charcoal on a birthday trip to Britain this week.

Much of the UK has been sweltering in the 30s, with wildfires breaking out on moorland in the north of England and parts of Scotland experienci­ng the hottest days since 1893, when Queen Victoria was on the throne.

Both Belfast and Glasgow have experience­d their hottest days on record, and even if by UAE standards, 29.5°C and 33.2°C are nothing more than a nice spring day, in cities where air conditioni­ng is unknown, they can make life very uncomforta­ble.

If the hot spell continues, it is predicted to break records set 42 years ago, during the famous Summer of 1976, when the government appointed a minister for drought, offering advice like “save water, bath with a friend” and with hosepipe ban patrol vans roaming the streets.

In England, the heatwave of 2018 has vied with the progress of the national team in the World Cup for headlines, which also reveal the uncertaint­y of summer weather, as in “Britain Will Boil for WEEKS in July Scorcher” (Daily Express).

Unusually hot weather has also hit much of the United States, where Denver has equalled its previous hottest day at 40.6°C. This year’s heatwave in the northern hemisphere, is attributed to El Nino, the cycle of warm water in the Pacific which develops every three to five years, but a number of scientists believe the effects have been exacerbate­d by climate change.

It is also unusually hot in parts of Central Asia, attributed to a dome of high pressure that has brought temperatur­es in the 40s to both Tbilisi in Georgia and Yerevan in Armenia. Further east, in Seoul, the monsoon season has brought temperatur­es that are both hot and humid – and complaints about the reliabilit­y of the air conditioni­ng in the city’s metro system.

Nowhere though is feeling the heat more than Quriyat, a fishing village south of Muscat, which for 24 hours last month never fell below 46.2°C and stayed that way for 51 hours.

That spell earned Quriyat two world records – the highest night-time temperatur­e recorded, at 44.2°C on June 17, and the highest low temperatur­e in history. Town twinning with Saguenay is, presumably, only a matter of time.

 ?? AFP ?? In Montreal, the city is sweltering under a heatwave and high humidity that has claimed at least 18 lives
AFP In Montreal, the city is sweltering under a heatwave and high humidity that has claimed at least 18 lives

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