A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Jul 19, 2022

As Temps Sets Record, UK Issues First Ever "Red Alert" Heat Death Warning

Global warming has shown up with a vengeance in Europe, especially the UK. A military airfield cancelled flights as the tarmac melted. Trains slowed because steel tracks softened. 

In a country where only 5% of the population have air conditioning and most structures are engineered for a colder, rainier climate, the UK's heat wave is having a catastrophic impact. As temperatures hit the highest in recorded history, the government issued its first ever "Red Alert" warning of potential death from the heat if precautions were not taken. JL

Mark Landler reports in the New York Times:

Some train services were canceled, while others were running at reduced speeds out of fear that the heat could cause tracks to buckle. Few homes have air conditioning. Britain’s Air Force said it had halted flights into and out of its largest base as a “preventative measure,” indicating that some of the tar on the runway may have melted, and flights into and out of London’s Luton Airport were disrupted after the temperatures caused a “surface defect” on the runway.

Trains slowed to a crawl. Schools and doctors’ offices shut their doors. The British Museum closed off its upper galleries, then the entire museum. The government urged people to work from home.

Much of Britain took an involuntary siesta on Monday as merciless heat scorched the country, driving temperatures close to triple digits Fahrenheit by midafternoon and threatening to smash records.

By midafternoon, Wales had provisionally recorded the hottest day in its history, with the thermometer in Hawarden hitting 98.8 degrees Fahrenheit (37.1 Celsius). The current record for England of 101.7 degrees Fahrenheit (38.7 Celsius) was set in 2019, according to the Met Office, Britain’s national weather service. At 3 p.m., the mercury in Kew Gardens in London hovered just under 100 degrees Fahrenheit.

For Americans in states that regularly sizzle, those numbers might seem underwhelming, but this is happening in a country unprepared for such extremes. In a nation known for its scudding clouds, frequent showers and temperate weather, the blazing heat was enough to hobble much of the country.

Some train services were canceled, while others were running at reduced speeds out of fear that the heat could cause tracks to buckle. Few homes have air conditioning. Britain’s Air Force said it had halted flights into and out of its largest base as a “preventative measure,” indicating that some of the tar on the runway may have melted, and flights into and out of London’s Luton Airport were disrupted after the temperatures caused a “surface defect” on the runway.

And the chains of one bridge over the River Thames that dates to Victorian times have been wrapped in reflective foil to protect them from the heat of the sun.

The country is under a widespread “red” warning for heat issued by the government for the first time in history. Officials urged people to use public transportation only if necessary, and to work from home on Monday and Tuesday — a plea reminiscent of the depths of the coronavirus pandemic.

Hospitals and nursing homes were a major cause of concern, officials said, with many older and other vulnerable patients in buildings without air-conditioning. Officials urged schools, in their final week of classes before a break, not to close because it would leave children unsupervised in the heat — a directive that some education districts were ignoring.

Britain’s history-making heat came as its governing Conservative Party was in the midst of a clamorous leadership race, in which combating climate change has fallen well down the list of priorities. The cost-of-living crisis has for now, at least, elbowed aside the government’s ambitious targets to reach “net zero” by 2050, with the five remaining candidates offering only tepid endorsements of the policy.

As temperatures climbed in London on Monday morning, Marilyn Mendoza, 56, was waiting at a subway station in the city’s northwest to head to her part-time job as a cleaner. “I have asthma, so it’s really not good for me,” Ms. Mendoza said.

On the stifling London Underground, Georgia McQuade, 22, hauled a heavy suitcase, as she made her way to Victoria bus station, where she planned to catch a bus home to Paris.

“The Tube is really hot right now,” Ms. McQuade said. “But at the same time, I don’t want to get an Uber car service, because using cars so much is what caused this heat in the first place.”

She expected to encounter even higher temperatures in Paris, as a mass of hot air has baked Italy and Spain over the past week and fanned wildfires in France and other parts of Europe. Then it spilled across the English Channel.

PARIS — Fires continued to rage Monday in France and Spain, adding misery to those already suffering from relentless heat.

In France, firefighters were battling two gigantic wildfires that have torn through more than 50 square miles of pine forest in the southwest of the country over the past week, forcing about 16,000 people to evacuate. Roughly 1,700 firefighters have been deployed to contain the flames; a dozen have been lightly injured since last week. No deaths have been reported.

Spain, which recorded 30 wildfires burning in the south and northwest of the country, reported its first firefighter death.

The firefighter was killed in a fire in northwest Spain on Sunday, the authorities said. Sharing his sorrow in a message posted on Twitter, Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez of Spain said, “There are no words to appreciate the immense work of those tirelessly fighting the fire.”

The newspaper El País also reported on Monday that the body of a shepherd had been found in the area of Tábara, near where the firefighter died.

Fires in Spain, exacerbated by 10 days of extreme heat, have consumed nearly 80 square miles of woods and brush. And train services have been suspended on part of the high-speed line between Madrid and Ourense, in the west, because of a blaze burning close to the line, the authorities said.

Visiting an affected area in the southwest on Monday morning, Mr. Sánchez said that since the beginning of the year, fires have destroyed 270 square miles of land, which he said was almost double the average area ravaged every year in the previous decade.

“Climate change kills: it kills people, as we have seen; it kills our ecosystem, and it destroys our most precious assets,” Mr. Sánchez said.

While tying a single heat wave to climate change requires extensive analysis, heat waves around the world are growing more frequent, longer lasting and more dangerous.

In a gauge of the stress that the heat and fires are causing, King Felipe VI is expected to visit the same area as Mr. Sánchez on Monday afternoon




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