The Japan Times - Early heat wave breaks records in western US

EUR -
AED 3.815338
AFN 76.867484
ALL 98.707283
AMD 415.510263
ANG 1.872395
AOA 949.93946
ARS 1094.713251
AUD 1.653037
AWG 1.866615
AZN 1.766579
BAM 1.960936
BBD 2.097785
BDT 126.706125
BGN 1.956841
BHD 0.391466
BIF 3038.345478
BMD 1.038751
BND 1.406043
BOB 7.17946
BRL 5.985693
BSD 1.038966
BTN 90.961426
BWP 14.441144
BYN 3.400087
BYR 20359.511579
BZD 2.086956
CAD 1.485886
CDF 2960.438989
CHF 0.940106
CLF 0.026056
CLP 999.87023
CNY 7.571347
CNH 7.568992
COP 4303.086647
CRC 528.728057
CUC 1.038751
CUP 27.526891
CVE 110.886893
CZK 25.097236
DJF 184.606874
DKK 7.461282
DOP 64.558846
DZD 140.505751
EGP 52.250506
ERN 15.581259
ETB 131.142664
FJD 2.399566
FKP 0.855501
GBP 0.835166
GEL 2.903343
GGP 0.855501
GHS 15.994851
GIP 0.855501
GMD 74.790435
GNF 8991.42476
GTQ 8.031998
GYD 217.375022
HKD 8.088283
HNL 26.664376
HRK 7.66551
HTG 135.899204
HUF 404.727303
IDR 16970.224214
ILS 3.691813
IMP 0.855501
INR 90.969985
IQD 1360.763274
IRR 43718.416288
ISK 146.795927
JEP 0.855501
JMD 164.27579
JOD 0.736887
JPY 157.081425
KES 133.998651
KGS 90.839088
KHR 4173.178062
KMF 492.990144
KPW 934.875647
KRW 1502.251541
KWD 0.320496
KYD 0.865847
KZT 533.780594
LAK 22561.662682
LBP 93102.415659
LKR 309.863054
LRD 204.919541
LSL 19.164836
LTL 3.06716
LVL 0.62833
LYD 5.100381
MAD 10.395299
MDL 19.445709
MGA 4882.127565
MKD 61.538886
MMK 3373.8214
MNT 3529.674619
MOP 8.332024
MRU 41.601923
MUR 48.478296
MVR 15.99835
MWK 1804.309818
MXN 21.246706
MYR 4.596439
MZN 66.377041
NAD 19.16469
NGN 1556.786152
NIO 38.174216
NOK 11.643963
NPR 145.540088
NZD 1.830128
OMR 0.399931
PAB 1.039016
PEN 3.856363
PGK 4.159936
PHP 60.221563
PKR 289.916437
PLN 4.190735
PYG 8179.264823
QAR 3.782059
RON 4.975925
RSD 117.075501
RUB 100.502084
RWF 1455.289578
SAR 3.895721
SBD 8.770355
SCR 14.873514
SDG 624.289427
SEK 11.319941
SGD 1.402256
SHP 0.855501
SLE 23.792577
SLL 21782.080431
SOS 593.640184
SRD 36.466413
STD 21500.04
SVC 9.091205
SYP 13505.835166
SZL 19.165052
THB 35.078347
TJS 11.340931
TMT 3.635627
TND 3.320365
TOP 2.432855
TRY 37.388584
TTD 7.054885
TWD 34.082551
TZS 2660.010723
UAH 43.07729
UGX 3818.165562
USD 1.038751
UYU 45.230422
UZS 13493.370044
VES 62.394297
VND 26249.227429
VUV 123.322556
WST 2.909361
XAF 657.708095
XAG 0.032225
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.807275
XDR 0.796821
XOF 654.931457
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.649204
ZAR 19.176946
ZMK 9350.000613
ZMW 29.17107
ZWL 334.477266
  • RBGPF

    -0.7000

    65.3

    -1.07%

  • CMSC

    -0.0600

    23.44

    -0.26%

  • GSK

    -1.3200

    36.38

    -3.63%

  • RELX

    -0.3700

    50.4

    -0.73%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.83

    +0.04%

  • BCE

    -1.3800

    23.52

    -5.87%

  • BCC

    0.3600

    125.11

    +0.29%

  • AZN

    1.4250

    72.36

    +1.97%

  • RIO

    0.8200

    62.19

    +1.32%

  • NGG

    -1.0000

    61.67

    -1.62%

  • VOD

    0.1700

    8.44

    +2.01%

  • BP

    0.2900

    31.96

    +0.91%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    11.58

    +0.17%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    7.53

    +0.4%

  • JRI

    0.0000

    12.83

    0%

  • BTI

    0.5200

    41.62

    +1.25%

Early heat wave breaks records in western US
Early heat wave breaks records in western US / Photo: Jim WATSON - AFP

Early heat wave breaks records in western US

Scorching temperatures broke early summer records in the western United States, before the region's first major heat wave of the year eased slightly Friday.

Text size:

Millions of people in California, Nevada, Arizona, New Mexico and Texas have been under excessive heat warnings this week.

While the region is accustomed to sweltering heat, climate change worsened by human activity has led to more extreme weather and the current heat wave has been historically early.

Las Vegas recorded 111 degrees Fahrenheit (44 degrees Celsius) on Thursday, marking the earliest date in the year that temperature has ever been reached.

"The past few days have been HOT," observed the city's National Weather Service, publishing a lengthy list of locations where daily records have tumbled.

Among them, the notoriously scorching Death Valley desert reached 122F.

An excessive heat warning is in place until Saturday in Las Vegas, where libraries have been converted into cooling stations for residents to escape the furnace, and some events have been forced to move indoors.

At a Trump rally in Arizona, nearly a dozen people were taken to hospitals with heat exhaustion, fire officials told a local ABC affiliate.

Hiking at the popular Camelback Mountain and Piestewa Peak trails in the state's capital city Phoenix was prohibited due to the heat.

"With temperatures hitting near 110 degrees, it's not the day for hiking," the Phoenix Fire Department posted on Facebook.

Coastal regions have largely been spared.

But in a potentially ominous sign of the summer months to come, a number of small wildfires broke out across California.

The largest, around 150 miles northwest of Los Angeles, burned 3,600 acres (more than 1,450 hectares) of the agricultural Central Valley before being largely contained by firefighters.

After about 20 years of drought and in a climate that is slowly becoming more arid, California has seen an alarming number of destructive fires in recent years.

Wildfires are a natural -- and necessary -- part of the region's life cycle.

But climate change, caused by humanity's burning of fossil fuels that pumps greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, is making them bigger, hotter and more unpredictable.

K.Yoshida--JT