29/06/2021

(ABC) US Cities Set Up 'Cooling Centres' As Historic Heatwave Bakes Pacific North-West

ABC News - ABC/wires

People sleep at a cooling shelter set up in Portland, Oregon. (Reuters: Maranie Staab)

Key Points
  • Areas that normally experience mild weather are reaching temperatures in the mid-40s 
  • Temperatures have soared due to a high-pressure dome
  • The US National Weather Service says more unusual weather patterns could become more common amid rising global temperatures
Cities across the United States Pacific Northwest are setting up "cooling centres" where people can escape a record heatwave baking the region.

Daytime temperatures have been breaking records in places where many residents do not have air conditioning.

Shops have sold out of portable air conditioners, fans, water and sports drinks.

Cities have been reminding residents where pools and cooling centres are available and been urging people to stay hydrated, check on their neighbours and avoid strenuous activities.

"This is life-threatening heat," Jennifer Vines, health officer for Multnomah County in Oregon, said in a statement.

"People need to find some place cool to spend time during the coming days."

Multnomah County, which includes the state capital Portland, opened three cooling centres over the weekend, including one at the Oregon Convention Center in Portland. 

Sunday's forecast temperature of 44 degrees Celsius in Portland would break the temperature record of 42C, set just a day earlier. Another 44C day is predicted on Monday.

The temperature was expected to rise to an all-time record of 40C at the Seattle-Tacoma International Airport on Sunday and surpass that to reach 43.9C on Monday, as the excessive heat warning continues for the region.
At least one county closed several COVID-19 testing sites because of the heat.

Seattle opened additional public library branches on Sunday, and will again on Monday, to provide additional cooling centres, The Seattle Times reported.

Cooling centres have also been opened in parts of California and elsewhere in the Pacific north-west as the heatwave has gripped the region.

Temperatures had soared due to a high-pressure dome that had built over US and Canada's upper north-west, the National Weather Service said, similar to the atmospheric conditions that punished south-western states earlier this month.

The Salvation Army has been handing out bottled water. (Reuters: Karen Ducey)

The National Weather Service (NWS) in Coeur d’Alene said this week's weather would "likely be one of the most extreme and prolonged heatwaves in the recorded history of the inland north-west".

"Unprecedented heat will not only threaten the health of residents in the inland north-west but will make our region increasingly vulnerable to wildfires and intensify the impacts of our ongoing drought," the service said.

The high temperatures were forecast to move into western Montana beginning Monday.

Experts say extreme weather events such as the late-spring heatwaves that have descended on parts of the US this year cannot be linked directly to climate change.

But more unusual weather patterns could become more common amid rising global temperatures, NWS meteorologist Eric Schoening said. 

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