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- Currently in Los Angeles — July 12, 2023: Heat wave continues to build
Currently in Los Angeles — July 12, 2023: Heat wave continues to build
Plus, a historic heat wave gets underway in Southern California
The weather, currently.
Heat wave continues to build
In sunny SoCal, the much anticipated ridge is shooting highs into the mid to upper 80s in the LA basin, with temperatures topping 90 in places like Claremont and Woodland Hills inland. The forecasted heat has not disappointed. Expect temperatures to keep climbing each day, including overnight lows, which should rise to the upper 60s at worst across the LA metro. One place that hasn’t quite yet warmed up is along the beach, with Santa Monica, Redondo Beach, and other coastal locations barely topping 70 — with onshore flow and inversion still putting a damper on their heat wave.
What you can do, currently.
The climate emergency doesn’t take the summer off. In fact — as we’ve been reporting — we’re heading into an El Niño that could challenge historical records and is already supercharging weather and climate impacts around the world.
When people understand the weather they are experiencing is caused by climate change it creates a more compelling call to action to do something about it.
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What you need to know, currently.
Southern California will be the epicenter of one of the most intense heat waves ever recorded in the US Southwest this week.
Temperatures in Death Valley are expected to reach 130°F (54.4°C), challenging an all-time world record. The duration and intensity of this particular heat wave is also giving authorities caution, with the National Weather Service’s excessive heat outlook reaching ‘extreme’ for areas just inland of Los Angeles.
The heat wave comes courtesy of an especially strong high pressure system, which will act to dry out the atmosphere and cause additional heating due to descending air across the region. The name for this phenomenon is a heat dome, which can be self-reinforcing if it persists over the same region for a long enough period of time.
The California Department of Public Health has helpful information on how to stay cool — and safe — in this deadly heat.