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Chinese cities broil in heat, brace for more record temperatures

Chinese cities broil in heat, brace for more record temperatures
Over the past couple days, Shandong province and Beijing issued heat warnings.
PHOTO: The Straits Times

BEIJING - Major Chinese cities issued heat advisories, with Beijing expected to hit over 36 deg C on Monday, (May 15) as China braces for another year of record-breaking temperatures that could threaten electricity supply, crops and a fragile economy.

China has already suffered from heatwaves in several parts of the country since March.

Recently, Yunnan province was gripped with temperatures of more than 40 deg C, which is especially burdensome for power grids as millions of homes begin to switch on air conditioners.

Over the past couple of days, Shandong province and Beijing issued heat warnings.

Populous cities such as Jinan, Tianjin and Zhengzhou are expected to see temperatures soar to as high as 37 deg C.

The China Meteorological Administration has warned regions to prepare for more extreme heat in 2023.

Sporadic heatwaves are occurring ahead of the regular summer season - also particularly worrying for the agriculture sector.

Damaged crops could drive up food prices, exacerbate inflation and put pressure on China's economy as it tries to rebound from a three-year zero-Covid policy that stunted growth.

Yunnan in the south-west, known historically for its mild weather, had only 35mm of rain for the year to April 20, state broadcaster CCTV reported recently.

Rainfall in the provincial capital Kunming was less than eight mm, the lowest since records began.

Weather experts continually blame climate changes on global warming for recent harsh weather.

The World Meteorological Organisation's (WMO) latest assessment also predicts the strong likelihood of the El Nino weather phenomenon returning later in 2023.

"The development of an El Nino will most likely lead to a new spike in global heating and increase the chance of breaking temperature records," said WMO secretary-general Petteri Taalas.

ALSO READ: Imminent heatwaves to scorch northern China

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