International
Heatwaves hammer megacities in China’s Yangtze River basin
Heatwaves hammer megacities in China’s Yangtze River basin
July 13, 2022 | 11:49 PM
Searing heatwaves swept across China’s vast Yangtze River basin yesterday, hammering densely populated megacities from Shanghai on the coast to Chengdu deep in the heartlands.More than 90 red alerts, the most severe in a three-rung warning system, were active across China as of 3:30pm (0730 GMT).Most were in the Yangtze basin, which spans nearly 2,000km.Shanghai, China’s commercial capital, issued its second red alert in four days, warning of temperatures exceeding 40 degrees Celsius. Construction and other outdoor activities are reduced or halted under a red alert, historically very rare for the city of 25mn.In Nanjing, a nearby city of over 9mn, the summer “has never been hotter,” said one 77-year-old resident.The province of Zhejiang south of Shanghai issued a record 51 red alerts in one day, with local media reporting people being admitted to hospitals for heatstroke or even dying from it.The hot spell of the past 30 days has been described by Chinese weather watchers as widespread, prolonged and extreme and, due to higher demand for air-conditioning, the load on the power grids of seven provinces and regions has hit a record high, according to state media. The hashtag #heatstroke was trending on social media with 2.45mn views on the Weibo platform, with discussions ranging from people being admitted to hospital to the detrimental effects of long-term heat exposure.In Chengdu, the capital of southwestern Sichuan province, a scheduled outage and upgrade of the grid this week coincided with hot weather, sparking loud protests from some of its 21mn residents on social media.“This is a large-scale blackout,” said a netizen on Weibo.“Residents can’t be guaranteed their power supply. No one is doing anything about it.”In the city of Yanjin, also in China’s southwest, temperatures reached 44 degrees Celsius on Monday, the highest since record-keeping started in 1959, state television reported.In the past month, high-temperature events have affected more than 900mn of China’s 1.4bn people and a total area of 5mn square kilometres, or half of the country, the National Climate Center said yesterday.In Henan province, maintenance workers cleaned and checked air-conditioners on top of trains that pass through its capital Zhengzhou, a transportation hub in central China, under the piercing rays of the sun.“Up here, it is very hot, it is like a food steamer,” said one worker, Wang Mian.
July 13, 2022 | 11:49 PM