The Shanghai Meteorological Center on Thursday issued the first
red warning signal for high temperatures this year after the
sprawling metropolis hit 40C, logging the 22nd day of
temperatures over 40C since its Xujiahui weather station began
tracking data in 1873.
In nearby Hangzhou, officials issued a red warning early on
Friday, with some areas in Shangcheng district, Binjiang
district, Gongshu district, and Xihu district hitting 40C. A red
warning is the most severe in a three-tiered warning temperature
system.
"It's so hot, like fire falling from the sky," said Wang, a
60-year-old tourist who travelled to Hangzhou from the cooler
northern province of Hebei. "I'm sweating all over. There is
wind but it is hot."
China recorded its hottest July in recent history on record,
while July 22 was the hottest day ever recorded, according to
the European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service, which
has tracked such global weather patterns since 1940.
Chinese weather forecasters also issued warnings for high
temperatures for many parts of the country with Anhui, Jiangsu,
Hubei, Jiangxi, Zhejiang, and Fujian provinces, Chongqing and
Shanghai expected to see temperatures around 37-39C, and some
areas at 40C or higher.
Treacherous heatwaves are becoming the norm in China as experts
blame global climate changes for extreme weather conditions
across the world.
"It's so hot and I am sweating all the time," said Li Wen, a
22-year-old tourist visiting Shanghai. "Everyone is wearing sun
protection shirts, holding parasols, and taking precautions
against the sunshine."
The country is bearing through yet another summer of torrid heat
and weather experts expect more hotter and longer heatwaves for
the foreseeable future.
(Reporting by Nicoco Chan and Xihao Jiang in Hangzhou and
Bernard Orr in Beijing; Additional writing by Liz Lee; Editing
by Tomasz Janowski)
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