Shanghai: A thermometer on the side of a building shows the temperature in Shanghai on Friday. China’s biggest city sweltered under a record high of 40.9 degrees Centigrade, authorities said as they issued a “red alert” after a stubborn heat wave that has plagued much of the country.—AFP
Shanghai: A thermometer on the side of a building shows the temperature in Shanghai on Friday. China’s biggest city sweltered under a record high of 40.9 degrees Centigrade, authorities said as they issued a “red alert” after a stubborn heat wave that has plagued much of the country.—AFP

SHANGHAI: Shanghai sweltered under a new record high of 40.9 degrees Centigrade (105 F) on Friday, authorities said as they issued a weather “red alert” over a stubborn heat wave that has plagued much of the country.

Hospitals in the city have reported increased numbers of patients suffering from heat-related illnesses, according to state media, and the Shanghai zoo said it was putting large blocks of ice into some animal enclosures to help them beat the heat, while providing frozen apples to its pandas.

China’s most populous city has baked under soaring summer temperatures for more than two weeks and Friday afternoon reached the hottest point since the establishment of its benchmark weather station in 1872, the municipal weather bureau said.

Other areas of China also have seen records set in recent weeks, in what has been a torrid summer so far for much of the country, while large areas of south-central China have endured raging floods from torrential rain.

Shanghai’s “red alert” — the first this year — is triggered when temperatures in excess of 40 degrees are forecast and comes with a warning to citizens to keep cool and avoid too much time outdoors, especially children, the elderly, or the sick.

It also puts authorities on heightened alert against fires breaking out and advises special care with perishable foods to prevent spoilage and bacteria.

Shanghai is getting hotter — the previous record of 40.8 degrees was set only in 2013, and eight of the 12 highest temperatures reached over the past century were recorded in the last five years, according to the city weather bureau.

Published in Dawn, July 22nd, 2017

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