Sizzling heat wave blankets U.S. Southwest for third day
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[June 17, 2021]
By Dan Whitcomb and Scott DiSavino
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) -Much of the western
United States baked for a third day on Wednesday under a punishing heat
wave that has set temperature records, prompted health warnings and
strained power grids.
Although a shift in the weather has provided some relief to northern
states, including Montana and Idaho, the worst was still to come for
California and parts of the Southwest, National Weather Service
meteorologist Eric Schoening said.
"We're in a long-duration heat wave across the Western U.S.," Schoening
said. "Across the desert Southwest extending into California we're still
ramping up the temperatures throughout the rest of the week."
Salt Lake City, Utah, on Tuesday tied its all-time high temperature
since record-keeping began in 1894, at 107 degrees Fahrenheit (42
degrees Celsius). Phoenix tied a record for this date at 115 degrees and
Needles, California, in the Mojave Desert near the border of both Nevada
and Arizona, hit 121 degrees, also tying a daily record.
The National Weather Service has issued excessive heat warnings across
the U.S. West, warning that such conditions can be dangerous, even
fatal. No deaths had been reported from the brutally hot weather as of
Wednesday afternoon.
"Try not to spend too much time outside during the hottest part of the
day. Wear light clothing, stay hydrated," Schoening said, adding that
residents should be "keeping an eye on pets, checking on the elderly,
not leaving anyone, including kids or pets in hot cars."
WILDFIRE DANGERS
The weather service also issued red flag warnings of high fire danger in
Arizona, California, Nevada and Utah. Major wildfires were burning in
Colorado and Arizona.
Wildfires scorched more than 6,500 square miles (17,000 square km) of
land in 2020, destroying hundreds of Californian homes during a
particularly fierce fire season.
The unusually severe late-spring heat wave was the result of a
high-pressure ridge that built over southwestern deserts, weather
service meteorologists say, and could not be blamed directly on global
warming.
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Power lines are shown in California ahead of a heave wave in 2020,
in Carlsbad, California, U.S., August 17, 2020. REUTERS/Mike
Blake/File Photo
"But studies show that as the climate changes and it
gets warmer, we will see more of these anomalous events over time,"
Schoening said.
The brutal heat triggered a surge in electricity demand as residents
cranked up air conditioners and fans. Texas and California, the two
most populous U.S. states, urged energy conservation.
California's grid operator issued a "Flex Alert" for Thursday
evening, telling residents to turn off unneeded appliances and
office equipment between 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. and thermostats higher.
California and Texas both imposed rolling blackouts over the last
year to avoid a power system collapse, California due to the heat in
August 2020 and Texas in February 2021 after a deep freeze that left
millions without heat.
Much of the U.S. Southwest is also in the grip of a drought that has
cut hydropower supplies, leaving rivers running dry and prompting
ranchers to sell livestock.
The Electric Reliability Council of Texas (ERCOT), which operates
most of the state's power system, projected demand would break the
June record, set on Monday, in the coming days.
(Reporting by Scott DiSavino in New York, Andrew Hay in Taos, New
Mexico, Aishwarya Nair in Bangalore and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles;
Editing by Marguerita Choy and Leslie Adler)
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