Millions swelter under extreme heat as climate crisis tightens grip on US – live | Climate crisis #Millions #swelter #extreme #heat #climate #crisis #tightens #grip #live #Climate #crisis

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Heatwaves distort streetcars, pedestrians and cars on Canal Street in New Orleans on 28 June.
Heatwaves distort streetcars, pedestrians and cars on Canal Street in New Orleans on 28 June. Photograph: Sophia Germer/AP

Sara Sneath

A heat dome of high pressure has been hovering over Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma creating dangerously hot weather for nearly two weeks.

A heat advisory is expected to last through Tuesday, with heat index readings reaching as high as 120F last week and evening temperatures in the 80s offering little reprieve.

The city of New Orleans announced that cooling centers will be open for residents to escape the heat throughout the weekend. Louisiana’s high humidity makes it even harder for the body to cool down during high temperatures, said Alicia Van Doren, who helped write a recent report for the Louisiana department of health about heat-related illnesses in the state.

High humidity levels in the air prevent sweat from evaporating, impeding the body’s mechanism to stay cool. Van Doren said:

So when that internal heat production exceeds the heat loss, the body reaches a point that it can no longer sustain its natural thermal regulation. That’s when core temps start to rise and heat stroke occurs.

Since 1 April, more than 1,200 people have gone to emergency departments in the state for heat-related illnesses, according to Louisiana department of health, or LDH, data.

A report published by the LDH last month found that workers – especially those in agriculture, construction, landscaping, transportation and utilities – are among the most at-risk populations for heat-related illnesses because they have less control over the amount of time they spend under the sun. About 320 workers are taken to the hospital for heat-related illnesses in the state every year, according to the report. Black workers were hospitalized for heat-related illness at double the rate of white workers.

Millions of Americans on alert for dangerously high temperatures amid climate crisis warnings

Good morning. Welcome back to our coverage of the extreme weather impacting tens of millions across the US.

Excessive heat warnings remain in place in many areas across the country and are expected to last through the week. A heat dome of high pressure has been hovering over Louisiana, Texas and Oklahoma creating dangerously hot weather for nearly two weeks. On Sunday, heat index values threatened to hit 110F in New Orleans, according to the National Weather Service.

In Phoenix, Arizona, temperatures are expected to rise above 110F all week, after reaching 115F on Sunday – eight degrees above normal for this time of the year and approaching the record of 118F set in 2011. The onset of night will offer little relief from the sweltering heat, with night-time temperatures not expected to fall below the 80F necessary for the body to recover from the cumulative impact of heat.

The current heatwave was made five times more likely by climate change, according to an analysis by Climate Central.

Meanwhile, tens of thousands of residents in central Illinois remain without power after severe storms knocked down trees and power lines across the region. Heavy rains flooded Chicago on Sunday, trapping cars and flooding basements across the city. The National Weather Service warned the flooding could be “life-threatening”.

Stay tuned as we bring you the latest updates from across the region.

#Millions #swelter #extreme #heat #climate #crisis #tightens #grip #live #Climate #crisis

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