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    Cities across the West experiencing record-breaking heat

    By Julia JacoboMax Golembo,

    24 days ago

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1dRNEr_0vrjEfjV00

    Human-amplified climate change is making it more likely that extreme heat lasts longer into fall, as record-breaking temperatures for the month of October blanket much of the western U.S.

    An unprecedented late season heat wave is in effect in the West, with October temperatures broken in major cities, several of which are still experiencing triple-digit heat.

    MORE: How extreme weather impacts power grids and the customers who rely on them

    On Tuesday, Palm Springs reached 117 degrees Fahrenheit; Phoenix hit 113 degrees while Tucson got up to 105 degrees.

    Elsewhere in California, San Jose broke its daily record at 100 degrees; Oakland reached 96 degrees; Napa hit a daily record at 99 degrees; and downtown San Francisco reached 94 degrees, the hottest October temperature in the city in two years.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=4ajuyb_0vrjEfjV00
    ABC News - PHOTO: Autumn Heat.

    Some regions are expected to experience even hotter conditions on Wednesday. Heat alerts have been issued throughout California, Arizona and Nevada. Excessive heat warnings are also in place for San Francisco, Las Vegas and Phoenix, and a heat advisory has been issued in Los Angeles.

    The geographic range of the record heat is expected to expand eastward, including Colorado, where Denver could reach a record-high of 90 degrees.

    MORE: How zoos in the hottest parts of the country keep animals healthy during extreme heat

    If Denver reaches the 90s, it will be the latest 90-degree temperature ever recorded in the city, records show.

    The record heat is expected to last into the weekend for most of the West.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2pa6zq_0vrjEfjV00
    ABC News - PHOTO: October heat wave.

    Fire danger is also high from California to Montana due to the dry, hot and windy conditions.

    MORE: How extreme heat will disproportionately affect disadvantaged communities

    Human-amplified climate change is increasing the frequency and intensity of extreme heat events, according to climate scientists.

    The average number of heat waves that major U.S. cities experience each year has doubled since the 1980s, according to the federal government’s Fifth National Climate Assessment , released last November.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3BgPVo_0vrjEfjV00
    San Francisco Chronicle via Getty Images - PHOTO: Sunbathers dot the lawn at Dolores Park In San Francisco Oct. 1, 2024.

    The record-breaking temperature for the month of October set in Palm Springs and Phoenix on Monday were made at least five times more likely by human-amplified climate change, according to Climate Central’s Climate Shift Index .

    Global warming is also helping fuel extreme heat that persists well into the fall season.

    MORE: Some of the ways extreme heat will change life as we know it

    Fall nights have warmed by 2.7 degrees Fahrenheit, on average, from 1970 to 2023 in 212 U.S. cities, according to a Climate Central analysis.

    Fall warming is widespread across the contiguous U.S., and most intense in the Southwest, according to a Climate Central analysis.

    ABC News' Matthew Glasser and Daniel Peck contributed to this report.

    Related Search

    Heat wave impactWestern us weatherExtreme heatRecord temperaturesClimate changeExtreme weather

    Comments / 13

    Add a Comment
    suck it up buttercup
    23d ago
    I will worry about climate change or control when politicians stop flying everywhere. I will worry about it when all politicians' cars are EV. Until then, actions speak louder than words. Their actions do not support what they are forcing on American citizens!
    Icarus Man
    23d ago
    Fuck Off
    View all comments

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