Sweltering heat causes roads to melt in India

Temperatures breached 50 Celsius last week, causing a spike in cases of people suffering dehydration and heatstroke


Reuters May 26, 2016
Temperatures breached 50 Celsius last week, causing a spike in cases of people suffering dehydration and heatstroke. PHOTO: REUTERS

India was bracing on Monday for another bout of extreme heat after temperatures smashed records in some parts of the country, while weather officials warned against more frequent heat waves.

Temperatures in parts of the western region breached 50 Celsius last week, causing a spike in cases of people suffering dehydration and heatstroke, and triggering widespread power cuts as surging demand overwhelmed supply grids.

Television channels in Gujarat showed residents struggling to cross a street as their shoes became stuck in what appeared to be the melting surface of a road.

Indians struggle to cross the street as their shoes gets stuck in melting surface of a road. YOUTUBE SCREENGRAB

More than 100 feared dead in India heat wave

May and June are typically India's hottest months, when temperatures regularly exceed 40 Celsius in the run-up to the monsoon rains, but the severity of the heat this year has caught many off guard.

PHOTO: REUTERS

"There are usually thunderstorms this time of year, but these rains have not been occurring," said BP Yadav, head of the national weather forecasting centre of the India Meteorological Department.

"Hot winds have been blowing in from Afghanistan and Pakistan, leading to these extreme temperatures."

The mercury hit a record 51 degrees Celsius last week in Phalodi, a city in Rajasthan, beating a previous national high of 50.6 degrees in 1956.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Pakistan sizzles in hottest week of year

The heat should ease with the arrival of clouds and light showers this week, Yadav said, but his office forecast a return to elevated temperatures in late May or early June.

Possible reasons for the rising temperatures ranged from global warming to greater urbanisation, leading to taller buildings and increased pollution, Yadav added.

PHOTO: REUTERS

The heat wave has struck as India grapples with a major drought, worsening water shortages that have hit an estimated 330 million people.

"We are praying to the gods for an early monsoon so that people get some relief, as the heat has taken a toll on our bodies," said Neeraj Kumar, a resident of Kanpur.

PHOTO: REUTERS

"We are not even able to do our daily chores properly."

More than 500 people killed as heat wave bakes parts of India

The number of heat waves had nearly doubled in the 10 years to 2010 from earlier decades, the meteorological office said. The number in the last six years had also risen from prior to the year 2000, but identifying clear trends requires more data.

In January, two US government agencies said last year's global average temperature was the hottest ever by the widest margin on record.

COMMENTS (1)

Afaq Khan | 7 years ago | Reply Its really sad that we are polluting our earth and due to this pollution everyone is suffering a lot , drastic changes in weather has occurred. Society and individuals are eating and polluting the environment and later face death by hot weather. Guys we have to realize at own level that what we are doing ? Are you not harming ourselves by polluting ? We are suffering .. Help each other.
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