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Record heatwave hits India and Pakistan, worst is yet to come

2022-04-28T13:05:24.569Z


A record heatwave has hit India and Pakistan, causing power cuts and water shortages for millions... A record heat wave has hit India and Pakistan, causing power cuts and water shortages for millions of people who are expected to experience this furnace with increasing frequency in the future, according to climate change experts. To discover LIVE - War in Ukraine: follow minute by minute the evolution of the conflict YOUR COMMUNE - The results of the second round of the presidential election in


A record heat wave has hit India and Pakistan, causing power cuts and water shortages for millions of people who are expected to experience this furnace with increasing frequency in the future, according to climate change experts.

To discover

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The temperature in Delhi was approaching 46 degrees Celsius on Thursday.

And this extreme heat wave is expected to rage for another five days in northwest and central India and until the end of the week in the east, according to the Indian meteorological department.

India's northwest Rajasthan, western Gujarat and southern Andhra Pradesh have imposed power cuts on factories to reduce consumption.

According to press reports, major power plants are facing coal shortages.

Heat waves have killed more than 6,500 people in India since 2010. Scientists say that due to climate change they are more frequent but also more severe.

"

Climate change makes high temperatures in India more likely

," said Dr Mariam Zachariah of the Grantham Institute, Imperial College London.

"

Before human activities increased global temperatures, heat like the one that hit India earlier this month would only have been observed about once every 50 years

," the expert added.

We can now expect such high temperatures about once every four years

,” she warns.

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48 degrees in Pakistan

The megalopolis of more than 20 million inhabitants lacks modern infrastructure to process the 12,000 tonnes of waste it produces daily.

According to Pradeep Khandelwal, ex-head of the Delhi waste management department, all these fires are probably caused by the extremely high temperatures which accelerate the decomposition of organic waste.

Neighboring Pakistan was also experiencing extreme heat on Thursday, which is expected to continue into next week.

Temperatures are expected to be 8 degrees above normal in parts of the country, peaking at 48 degrees in parts of rural Sindh on Wednesday, according to the Pakistan Meteorological Society.

Farmers will have to manage the water supply wisely, in this country where agriculture, the mainstay of the economy, employs around 40% of the total workforce.

"

The nation's public health and agriculture will face serious threats from this year's extreme temperatures

," Climate Change Minister Sherry Rehman said.

March was the hottest on record since 1961, according to Pakistan's meteorological office.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2022-04-28

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