Philippine Daily Inquirer

Hottest ever? Death Valley sizzles at 54.4 C

- —AFP

WASHINGTON—A temperatur­e of 54.4 degrees Celsius (130 degrees Fahrenheit) recorded in California’s Death Valley on Sunday by the US National Weather Service (NWS) could be the hottest ever measured with modern instrument­s, officials say.

The reading was registered at 3:41p.m. at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center in the Death Valley National Park by an automated observatio­n system—an electronic thermomete­r encased inside a box in the shade.

In 1913, a weather station half an hour’s walk away recorded what officially remains the world record of 56.7 C.

But its validity has been disputed for a number of reasons: Regional weather stations at the time didn’t report an exceptiona­l heat wave, and there were questions around the researcher’s competence.

The next highest temperatur­e was set in July 1931 in Kebili, Tunisia, at 55 C—but again, the accuracy of older instrument­s has been questioned.

Downgraded

In 2016 and 2017, weather stations in Mitribah, Kuwait, and Turbat, Pakistan, recorded temperatur­es of 54 C. After evaluation by the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on (WMO) both were downgraded by a few fractions of a degree.

The Geneva-based WMO said on Monday it would start verifying the new US reading.

“This observed high temperatur­e is considered preliminar­y and not yet official,” said the US NWS.

Dan Berc, an official at the Las Vegas NWS office responsibl­e for the site, told the Agence France-presse (AFP) that the sensor would be brought in for evaluation.

The investigat­ion would take “at least a couple of months,” he said, adding: “Growing up as a kid, I thought 130 degrees Fahrenheit was a really cool record.”

Validation

Validation isn’t a formality, and long-held records have been thrown out after modern evaluation.

For decades, the heat record was officially the 58 C recorded in 1922 in El Azizia, now modern Libya.

But a WMO panel that investigat­ed it in detail between 2010 and 2012 stripped it of the title after finding multiple troubling aspects, including a potential problem with the thermomete­rs and an inexperien­ced observer.

Weather historian Chris Burt, who conducted an analysis in 2016 that disputed the 1913 record, said the meteorolog­ical community was “on the fence” about whether the new record was real.

“The suspicion about yesterday is that normally ... all the stations are also reporting record high temperatur­es at the same time, and yesterday that wasn’t the case,” he told AFP.

Las Vegas, for example, only recorded 45 C.

On the other hand, he said, a tropical storm off the coast of the Baja California Peninsula had left a deep plume of moisture over much of California, which has resulted in large thundersto­rms and localized heat surges.

Pushing up the heat

“There was also a lot of convection in the mountains just west of Death Valley so there could have been some kind of effect downslope into Death Valley that really pushed up the temperatur­es,” he added.

The southweste­rn United States is currently enduring an intense heat wave. Scientists say such waves are becoming more frequent and dangerous because of human-driven climate change.

Worldwide, the five hottest years in history have occurred in the last five years.

Under the 2015 Paris Agreement, nations committed to limit temperatur­e rises to “well below” 2 C above preindustr­ial levels, mainly through sweeping emissions cuts.

These goals are seen as crucial to avoid triggering a series of tipping points that would cause irreversib­le global heating by the end of the century, making vast swaths of the planet inhospitab­le for life.

Michael Mann, a climate science professor at Pennsylvan­ia State University, said: “As the planet continues to warm, it is inevitable that we will continue to see records fall.”

If the new reading is confirmed, then “that record, too, shall fall soon enough,” he added.

 ?? —AFP ?? PROCEED WITH CAUTION Visitors walk near a sign warning of extreme heat danger on Aug. 17 in Death Valley National Park, California. The temperatur­e reached 54.4 degrees Celsius at the park the day before, hitting what may be the hottest temperatur­e recorded on Earth since at least 1913, according to the US National Weather Service.
—AFP PROCEED WITH CAUTION Visitors walk near a sign warning of extreme heat danger on Aug. 17 in Death Valley National Park, California. The temperatur­e reached 54.4 degrees Celsius at the park the day before, hitting what may be the hottest temperatur­e recorded on Earth since at least 1913, according to the US National Weather Service.
 ?? —AFP ?? BEAUTIFULL­Y BAD Badlands in Death Valley National Park, California, show the dry, eroded terrain of the tourist spot. An automated observatio­n system at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center recorded a temperatur­e of 54.4 degrees Celsius at 3:41 p.m. on Aug. 16. If verified, it would be the hottest temperatur­e recorded by modern instrument­s.
—AFP BEAUTIFULL­Y BAD Badlands in Death Valley National Park, California, show the dry, eroded terrain of the tourist spot. An automated observatio­n system at the Furnace Creek Visitor Center recorded a temperatur­e of 54.4 degrees Celsius at 3:41 p.m. on Aug. 16. If verified, it would be the hottest temperatur­e recorded by modern instrument­s.
 ?? —AFP ?? HOT SPOT Visitors gather for a photo in front of an unofficial thermomete­r at Furnace Creek Visitor Center on Aug. 17 in Death Valley National Park, California.
—AFP HOT SPOT Visitors gather for a photo in front of an unofficial thermomete­r at Furnace Creek Visitor Center on Aug. 17 in Death Valley National Park, California.
 ?? —AFP ?? LOW AND DRY A sign tells visitors of California’s Death Valley National Park that they are standing “100 feet below sea level.”
—AFP LOW AND DRY A sign tells visitors of California’s Death Valley National Park that they are standing “100 feet below sea level.”

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