53
And Counting! Heat Wave Breaks Records In Iran, Across The Caucasus
6
July, 2018
An
intense heat wave is shattering temperature records in Iran and the
Caucasus nations of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Georgia, causing power
shortages that are adding to discomfort in the region.
Weather
experts on July 6 said the heat wave is the result of a high-pressure
dome or heat dome that formed over the Eurasian region and reaches as
far north as southern Russia, where temperatures hit a record high
for June on June 28.
In
the Georgian capital, Tbilisi, temperatures soared to a record of 41
degrees Celsius on July 4, contributing to unhealthy air pollution
levels reported by the National Environmental Agency.
Earlier
in the week, on July 1, temperatures hit a record 43 degrees in the
Azerbaijani capital of Baku, prompting heavy use of air-conditioning
that the government said caused an explosion at a hydroelectric power
plant and a nationwide power outage.
It
was the worst power outage since Azerbaijani independence from the
Soviet Union in 1991.
A
day later, temperatures soared to a record high 42 degrees in
Armenia's capital, Yerevan, while Iran experienced its hottest July
temperature ever -- 53 degrees -- causing misery and power shortages
and prompting the government to change work hours in Tehran to save
electricity.
The
consumption of electrical power in Iran on July 2 hit 56,672
megawatts, a historical high, officials said.
Tehran
Province announced that all government agencies and offices, banks,
municipalities, and other public nongovernmental organizations would
start work at 6 a.m. and end at 2 p.m. The schedule was to be in
effect until July 22.
Iranian
officials said that Tehran Province’s power demand increases by
about 150-200 megawatts with each one degree rise in temperature.
Tehran
in recent days has also experienced rolling blackouts and a shortage
of water to keep power stations running, officials said.
In
the cities of Kermanshah, Ardabil, and Isfahan, traffic lights and
elevators stopped working as the heat caused several hours-long power
outages.
Some
Iranian provinces have announced a schedule of rolling blackouts that
will leave residents without power for two hours every day.
The
misery hasn't been confined to Eurasia. Weather trackers say
temperatures have been surging to record highs from North America to
Europe and the Middle East.
An
intense heat wave in Canada has caused 33 deaths in the province of
Quebec, where the mostly elderly victims passed away in homes that
lacked air-conditioning.
While
individual weather events cannot be tied directly to global warming,
scientists say the gradual warming of the planet caused by greenhouse
gases likely is behind the uptick in heat waves.
"Heat
waves like this are likely to be more frequent going forward than
they have been in the past," Jeff Masters, director of
meteorology for the private forecasting service Weather Underground,
told AP.
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