Extreme weather: China faces heat in north, floods in south
The average June temperature across the country hit the highest since 1961 while seasonal flooding was battering several regions.
From the snowcapped peaks of Tibet to the tropical island of Hainan, China has been sweltering under the worst heatwave in decades while rainfall has hit records in June.
The northeastern provinces of Shandong, Jilin and Liaoning saw precipitation rise to the highest levels ever recorded in June, while the national average of 112.1 millimetres was 9.1 percent high than the same month last year, the China Meteorological Administration said in a report Tuesday.
The average temperature across the nation also hit 21.3 degrees Celsius in June, up 0.9C from the same period month last year and the highest since 1961. No relief is in sight, with higher than usual temperatures and precipitation forecast in much of the country throughout July, the administration said.
In the northern province of Henan, Xuchang hit 42.1C and Dengfeng 41.6C on June 24 for their hottest days on record, according to global extreme weather tracker Maximiliano Herrera.
China has also seen seasonal flooding in several parts of the country, causing misery for hundreds of thousands, particularly in the hard-hit south that receives the bulk of rainfall as well as typhoons that sweep in from the South China Sea.
READ MORE: Thousands more Sydney residents evacuate as Australia floods worsen
The brutal heat wave in Central Asia is not just for record daytime temperatures but also record hot nights.
— Extreme Temperatures Around The World (@extremetemps) July 2, 2022
On 30 June Turpan,NW China recorded a min. +34.0C,while Koytendag in Turkmenistan had a hellish day with a min of 35.3C (Nationally the highest ever !) and max. 46.8C. pic.twitter.com/tSrsjv2jF3
Extreme weather trends
China is not alone in experiencing higher temperatures and more volatile weather. In Japan, authorities warned of greater than usual stress on the power grid and urged citizens to conserve energy.
Japanese officials announced the earliest end to the annual summer rainy season since the national meteorological agency began keeping records in 1951.
The rains usually temper summer heat, often well into July.
On Friday, the cities of Tokamachi and Tsunan set all-time heat records while several others broke monthly marks.
Large parts of the Northern Hemisphere have seen extreme heat this summer, with regions from the normally chilly Russian Arctic to the traditionally sweltering American South recording unusually high temperatures and humidity.
In the United States, the National Weather Service has held 30 million Americans under some kind of heat advisory amid record-setting temperatures.
The suffering and danger to health is most intense among those without air conditioning or who work outdoors, further reinforcing the economic disparities in dealing with extreme weather trends.
Volatile weather is also causing trouble for other parts of the world in what scientists say has all the hallmarks of climate change, with even more warming expected this century.
READ MORE: 1.7M under lockdown in China's central province after spike in Covid cases