Southwest broiling as summer kicks off with scorching temperatures
PHOENIX - The first day of summer brought some of the worst heat the Southwest U.S. has seen in years, forcing flights to be canceled, straining the power grid and making life miserable for workers toiling in temperatures that reached 120 degrees or higher in some desert cities.
Arizona, Nevada and California saw dramatic temperatures Tuesday as researchers say deadly heat waves like this one were going to grow more frequent.
Meteorologists in Phoenix said Tuesday evening the temperature topped out at 119 degrees — one that has only been matched or surpassed four other times.
The forecast called for a high of 120 degrees in Phoenix, which it hasn’t seen in more than two decades. Phoenix has hit 120 only three times in recorded history. The record high was 122 degrees on June 26, 1990.
Death Valley, Calif., reached 125 and Palm Springs, Calif., hit 121, still a degree lower than the same day last year.
The operator of California’s power grid called on people to conserve electricity during peak hours.
Workers at a construction site in a Phoenix suburb huddled under an excavator to find a sliver of a shade during a break. At another building site, men in hard hats and yellow vests labored and sweated in the heat, downing water to stay hydrated. Project superintendent Tommy Russell said his company has held weekly safety meetings to prepare for the heat, and he will send workers home if it hits 120.
Las Vegas also baked. Visitors tried to stay inside air-conditioned casinos. Others went to a bar where the temperature is set at 23 degrees and glasses, walls and seats are sculpted from ice.
Tonya and Lavonda Williams traveled to Sin City from Orlando, Fla., to see the Backstreet Boys in concert. Walking on the Strip in 112 degrees was too much to handle, even for people accustomed to heat.
“This is like the oven door is open,” Lavonda Williams said as the sisters walked from a pedestrian bridge into The Palazzo casino-resort.
The weather comes as new research found that nearly one in three people now experience 20 days a year when the heat reaches deadly levels. The study of nearly 2,000 deadly heat waves worldwide since 1980 was published Monday in the journal Nature Climate Change. But the study predicts that up to three in four people worldwide will endure that kind of heat by the end of the century, if global warming continues unabated.