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- Currently in Los Angeles — July 17, 2023: Beach bum weather continues
Currently in Los Angeles — July 17, 2023: Beach bum weather continues
Plus, new all-time heat records in China and Europe.
The weather, currently.
Beach bum weather continues
And now we’re in the part of the plot where Southern California weather is once again the envy of the country and the world. I lived the life of a beach bum this weekend, where it was a perfect 77. Into this week, expect the heat wave to keep rolling with high temperatures in the upper 80s inland of the beach. In the valley, high temperatures will be in the 90s.
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.
On Sunday, China recorded its hottest temperature in history as Sanbao in Xinjiang Province hit 52.2°C (126°F) — the hottest temperature ever measured on Earth north of 40° latitude (the same latitude as Philadelphia). Also on Sunday, Death Valley, California hit 128°F (53.3°C) — one of the highest reliable temperatures ever recorded in the world. In Europe, a record-breaking heat wave is on tap this week.
New all-time record temperatures of 49°C (120°F) are expected in Italy this week that could challenge the hottest ever recorded in Europe, just days after a new report showed that last year’s then-record-setting European heatwave killed upwards of 60,000 people.
These records make sense in our rapidly warming world. June 2023 was the hottest month in world history, and July should be even hotter.
🌡️ Dangerous levels of heat are affecting parts of North America, Asia and southern Europe
📈 China provisionally recorded it's highest temperature on record on Sunday and some Mediterranean countries will challenge their respective records this week
— Met Office (@metoffice)
4:59 PM • Jul 16, 2023