The Guardian (USA)

Record-breaking US Pacific north-west heatwave killed almost 200 people

- Victoria Bekiempis

The death toll from the record-breaking heatwave that struck the US Pacific north-west last week has risen to nearly 200, with health authoritie­s reporting 116 deaths in Oregon and 78 in Washington state.

The data in Washington state are particular­ly striking given historical context. There were seven heat-related deaths in Washington between midJune and the end of August in 2020. Between 2015 and 2020, the state saw just 39 deaths in the late spring and summer months.

“This huge jump in mortality due to heat is tragic and something many people thought they’d never see in the Pacific north-west with its mostly moderate climate,” Dr Scott Lindquist, Washington’s acting state health officer, said in a statement. “But climates are changing, and we see the evidence of that with dramatic weather events, major flooding, historic forest fires, and more.”

In Oregon, most of the deaths were in Portland’s Multnomah county; many of those who died lacked air conditioni­ng or fans, and succumbed to the heat alone. The youngest victim was age 37, and the oldest was 97, according to the Associated Press.

On Tuesday, the Oregon governor, Kate Brown, directed agencies to review how the state can improve its handling of heat emergencie­s. Brown also enacted emergency regulation­s to protect workers from heat, following the 26 June death of a farm worker in rural Oregon.

The heatwave, which also struck western Canada, is thought to have killed as many as 500 people in British Columbia, and sparked hundreds of wildfires currently burning in the prov

ince.

During the heatwave, temperatur­es broke previous records in many municipali­ties; in some areas, they exceeded 115F (46C). Meteorolog­ists said the weather event was prompted by two pressure systems.

“The Pacific north-west got caught in a region where a series of feedbacks set up these very warm temperatur­es – no, hot temperatur­es – with very little cloud cover and very warm temperatur­es at night too,” Richard Bann, a meteorolog­ist with the National Weather Service’s Weather Prediction Center, previously told the Guardian.

The fresh data on fatalities comes as a new analysis found that the deadly heatwave would have been “virtually impossible without humancause­d climate change”, which added several extra degrees to scorching record temperatur­es. The researcher­s behind the study from World Weather Attributio­n, which has not yet been peer reviewed but relies on peer-reviewed methodolog­y, write that“the observed temperatur­es were so extreme that they lie far outside the range of historical­ly observed temperatur­es.”

“This makes it hard to quantify with confidence how rare the event was,” they said, noting that even in an environmen­t that’s enduring the climate crisis, such a historic heatwave is still a once-in-a-millenium weather event. However, if climate change were to increase another 0.8C, it could happen every five to 10 years, the study claimed.

Experts have also said that more than 1 billion marine animals on Canada’s Pacific shore are likely to have died because of the extreme heat. Christophe­r Harley, a University of British Columbia biologist, said that a walk on a Vancouver-area beach underscore­d the extreme loss of marine life.

“The shore doesn’t usually crunch when you walk on it. But there were so many empty mussel shells lying everywhere that you just couldn’t avoid stepping on dead animals while walking around,” Harley previously told the Guardian.

Mass death of shellfish would temporaril­y affect water quality, as clams and mussels help filter the sea, keeping the water clear enough so sunlight can reach eelgrass beds, in turn creating other species’ habitats, Harley said.

 ?? Photograph: Maranie Staab/ Reuters ?? People sleep at a cooling shelter set up during an unpreceden­ted heatwave in Portland, Oregon, 27 June.
Photograph: Maranie Staab/ Reuters People sleep at a cooling shelter set up during an unpreceden­ted heatwave in Portland, Oregon, 27 June.

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