Los Angeles/New York:An intense heatwave continued to grip much of the United States this weekend, triggering record-breaking temperatures and placing millions of people under heat alerts.”A heatwave will continue over much of the eastern US south of a quasi-stationary boundary,” the Weather Prediction Center (WPC) reported on Saturday.”These temperatures remain the most anomalous and dangerous for early summer over portions of the Midwest/Ohio Valley east to the Mid-Atlantic,” the WPC added. “Conditions will remain hot from central to southern California,” with highs on Sunday and Monday expected to range in the mid-to-upper 100s.
More than 115 million people across the US are currently under active National Weather Service (NWS) extreme heat alerts, according to the National Integrated Heat Health Information System as of Saturday.
A heat dome, caused by a high-pressure system trapping hot air near the ground, has settled over the Midwest and Northeast early this week, causing record-breaking temperatures in several cities.
Phoenix, the capital of Arizona, has already experienced its hottest days of 2024 so far, with temperatures soaring to 115 degrees Fahrenheit (46 degrees Celsius) this week.The first 19 days of June are the hottest on record for Phoenix. The average temperature in the city is 95.1 degrees Fahrenheit (35 degrees Celsius) this year, making it the hottest year out of 129 years of records, according to local news outlet Arizona’s Family.
This extreme heat has claimed the lives of at least six people, with another 87 deaths under investigation for potential heat-related causes, reported the Maricopa County Public Health Department in the latest heat surveillance report on June 15.
Much of California is also under heat advisories, with major cities like Los Angeles, San Diego, and San Francisco expected to be affected.
The NWS issued a heat advisory for Southern California, effective through Sunday night, warning that temperatures could reach 90 to 100 degrees Fahrenheit (32.2 to 37.8 degrees Celsius) and that “hot temperatures may cause heat illnesses.
“In Northern California’s Sacramento Valley, temperatures could reach 107 degrees Fahrenheit (41.7 degrees Celsius).This heatwave exacerbates the already challenging wildfire season in California, where dry and windy conditions have fueled several large fires. Despite progress in containing some blazes, the forecast high temperatures for the weekend are expected to hinder ongoing efforts to combat wildfires that have already burned thousands of acres across the state.
Wildfires have burned over 99,000 acres (about 400 square km) so far this year in California, according to the latest data from the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection.On the eastern side, New York City is bracing for potentially the longest stretch of 90-degree Fahrenheit (about 32-degree Celsius) days in June on record, prompting the NWS to issue a heat advisory effective until Sunday night.
Philadelphia, the largest city in Pennsylvania, has extended a heat health emergency through midnight on Sunday, according to the city’s Department of Public Health.Washington, DC is also facing a heat emergency, with temperatures expected to exceed 100 degrees Fahrenheit (about 38 degrees Celsius) on Sunday. This would surpass the previous record set in the 1980s and be the first time the district has reached triple digits since 2016, according to AccuWeather.