Excessive heat is baking US Southwest and expected to get worse
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[July 13, 2023]
By Liliana Salgado and Brad Brooks
PHOENIX (Reuters) -A prolonged heat wave blanketed a swath of the U.S.
stretching from California to South Florida on Wednesday, with
forecasters expecting temperatures that could shatter records in parts
of the Southwest in the coming days.
The National Weather Service issued excessive heat advisories, watches
and warnings for areas where about 100 million Americans live. The
sweltering conditions are expected to worsen over the weekend and
continue into next week.
While stifling temperatures gripped many parts of the country, Vermont
and other Northeastern states barely had time to recover from historic
flooding in recent days when the National Weather Service forecast more
heavy rainfall across parts of New England, where rivers and streams are
already running high.
Floodwaters turned the Vermont state capital of Montpelier into a
swirling, brown waterway, damaged roads and may have compromised the
city's water supply. Officials told the city's 8,000 residents to boil
their water before using it until further notice.
Extreme weather also threatened the Chicago area, where at least eight
tornadoes touched down in four counties in northeastern Illinois. The
twisters and thunderstorms forced O'Hare and Midway airports to
temporarily halt all air traffic, as tornado sirens echoed through the
third biggest U.S. city.
The growing frequency and intensity of severe weather across the U.S. is
symptomatic of global, human-driven climate change, experts in the field
say.
The Southwest was bracing for potentially deadly heat with much of the
area under an excessive heat warning.
Phoenix posted its 13th straight day with a temperature of at least 110
Fahrenheit (43 Celsius), with forecasts predicting the city next week
will break its record of 18 straight days over 110, set in June 1974.
Moreover, the overnight lows are holding above 90F (32C), offering
little relief.
"The heat is going to be expanding across California, Nevada, Arizona
and all the way into West Texas into this weekend and the core of the
strongest heat seems to be setting up for Friday through Monday. So
we'll be looking at records," said Tom Frieders, Warning Coordination
Meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Phoenix.
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Carlos Sandoval and other construction
workers work in temperatures that were over 100 degrees F (37
degrees C) as they install new sidewalk infrastructure in downtown
Palm Springs, California, U.S. July 11, 2023. Jay Calderon/USA Today
Network via REUTERS
At the family-owned Six Points Hardware store in Phoenix, fans and
air conditioner units have been flying off the shelves, said store
manager Drew Materniak.
The heat means "business is good," he said, noting the biggest
seller has been large cooling fans, sold mostly to businesses like
auto shops that cannot cool the air.
"Just stay inside man, just stay inside," was Materniak's advice for
dealing with the heat. Las Vegas peaked at 108F (42C) on Wednesday
and was forecast to match its all-time high mark of 117F (47C) on
Sunday, the weather service said.
A ridge of stagnant air parked in the atmosphere was causing the
excessive temperatures, said Ashton Robinson Cook, a forecaster with
the weather service's Weather Prediction Center. The mass blocks
cooler air and storm systems from rolling through the area, so it is
"just full sun and heat," he said.
In Texas, where temperatures reached the upper 90s and topped 100F
(37C) on Wednesday, the heat index will make it feel like 114F (46C)
in some places through the weekend. Warm ocean water is causing the
moist, humid air over much of the state that drives the heat index
higher, Cook said.
In a cooling center in the West Texas city of Lubbock, where the
temperature rose to 96F (36C) by midday, Courtney Martin, 41 and
homeless for the past two weeks, sat quietly inside a public library
doing needlepoint, keeping cool and staying hydrated with free
bottles of water.
"I'm in here to beat the heat," said Martin, who recently moved to
Lubbock from Michigan and is not accustomed to the high
temperatures. "I don't know what I'd do without the libraries as
cooling centers."
(Reporting by Liliana Salgado in Phoenix, Brad Brooks in Lubbock,
Texas, Brendan O'Brien in Chicago, Rich McKay in Atlanta, and Daniel
Trotta in Carlsbad, California; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Bill
Berkrot and Jamie Freed)
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