The Guardian (USA)

Nearly 200 US cities are seeing more extremely hot days, analysis finds

- Emily Holden in Washington

Nearly 200 US cities have seen an increase in the number of days each year that soar beyond a heat index of 90F (32.2C) or higher, according to an analysis of the last four decades.

“These extreme heat days are now comprising much of the summer for many cities in the south and southwest, while areas of the country that had relatively few summer days reach the 90F heat index in the past are now experienci­ng weeks of them,” said the report from the climate communicat­ions organizati­on Climate Central.

The higher temperatur­es are threatenin­g public health and making outdoor activities and sports more dangerous. A July heatwave in the midwest and eastern US forced the cancellati­on of the New York City Triathlon, as well as other running and horse races.

Climate Central used heat heat and humidity data for 239 cities and found 198 had an increase in the average number of days each year that felt 90F or hotter. They also found that 106 cities had an increase in “danger” days that felt 105F or hotter.

Globally, temperatur­es are 1.5F higher than they were in the middle of the last century, as humans’ power plants, cars and ways of living contribute pollution that heats the planet.

In parts of the Pacific north-west, days that were 90F or hotter increased substantia­lly. In Yakima, Washington, they more than doubled, from 13 to 29.

Salt Lake City, Utah, is seeing two weeks of days that hot. Fresno, California, saw a jump from 78 days to 93.

In the south, extreme heat isn’t just in the summer. Austin, Texas, had 126 days that felt like 90F or hotter on average for the last five years. Savannah, Georgia, had 114. And Miami had 161.

Danger days, which feel 105F or hotter, are rare but deadly. The National Weather Service can issue an “excessive heat warning” when two days in a row are forecast to be that hot without a cool night in between.

With those temperatur­es, NWS warns people who don’t take precaution­s can become seriously ill or die.

People in McAllen, Texas, have seen the biggest increase in danger days, climbing from 16 each year to 38.

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 ??  ?? Downtown Los Angeles skyscraper­s at smoggy sunrise. Photograph: choness/Getty Images/iStockphot­o
Downtown Los Angeles skyscraper­s at smoggy sunrise. Photograph: choness/Getty Images/iStockphot­o

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