
Beijing issues weather warning for hottest days of year
China has endured a string of extreme summers in recent years, with heat waves baking northern regions even as parts of the south have seen catastrophic rain and flooding.
Authorities in the city of 22 million people urged the public to take precautions, with temperatures expected to peak at around 38 degrees Celsius on Monday.
"It's been really hot lately, especially in the past few days," intern Li Weijun told AFP on Monday afternoon.
The 22-year-old said he had stopped wearing formal clothes to work and delayed his daily exercise until after 10pm to stay safe.
"I think it's related to climate change, and maybe also to the damage done to nature," he said.
An orange heat warning - the second-highest in a three-tier system - was issued on Monday as officials encouraged people to limit outdoor activity and drink more fluids to avoid heatstroke.
Construction workers should "shorten the amount of time consecutively spent at labour", while elderly, sick or weakened individuals ought to "avoid excessive exertion", according to the guidelines.
Zhang Chen, 28, said she carried an umbrella outdoors to prevent sunburn.
"I used to ride a bike, but once it gets this hot, I basically stop doing that," the IT worker told AFP.
Despite the beating sun, legions of delivery drivers zipped through downtown areas at noon to bring sustenance to Beijing's office workers.
A few lazed on the backs of their scooters in a shady spot, while elsewhere, people cooled off with ice creams or by taking a dip in the city's canals.
CLIMATE GIANT
Beijing is still a few degrees short of breaking its record for the hottest-ever June day, set at 41.1 degrees Celsius in 2023.
Human greenhouse gas emissions are driving climate change, which causes longer, more frequent and more intense heatwaves.
China is the world's largest producer of carbon dioxide, a potent greenhouse gas, though it has pledged to bring its emissions to a peak by the end of this decade and to net zero by 2060.
The country has also emerged as a global leader in renewable energy in recent years as it seeks to pivot its massive economy away from highly polluting coal consumption.
In a shady spot near an office building, 42-year-old Lucy Lu spent her lunch break with friends, kicking a shuttlecock through the air - a traditional Chinese game known as "jianzi".
"I was born and raised in Beijing, and summer here has always been like this," she said.
"But I do think when the temperature goes over 40 degrees Celsius, there should be some time off or work-from-home options to reduce the risk of heatstroke."
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CNA
a day ago
- CNA
Northern China flash flood kills at least 8, state media reports
BEIJING: At least eight people have died in a flash flood in northern China, state media reported on Sunday, with four others still missing, as the East Asian monsoon continues to unleash atmospheric chaos across the world's second-largest economy. The banks of a river running through the grasslands of Inner Mongolia burst at around 10 pm on Saturday, the report said, washing away 13 campers on the outskirts of Bayannur city, a major agricultural hub. One person has been rescued. China has suffered weeks of extreme weather since July, battered by heavier-than-usual downpours with the monsoon stalling over its north and south. Weather experts link the shifting pattern to climate change, testing officials as flash floods displace thousands and threaten billions of dollars in economic losses. Bayannur is an important national grain and oil production base, as well as a sheep breeding and processing center. At the other end of the country, a three-and-a-half-month fishing suspension in the southern province of Hainan ended on Saturday, state media reported, after agricultural affairs officials ordered ships to shelter in port owing to persistent, heavy rain. The deluge in Inner Mongolia follows a deadly downpour in Beijing - just under 1,000km away - late last month which killed at least 44 people and forced the evacuation of more than 70,000 residents. The central government announced last week 430 million yuan ($59.9 million) in fresh funding for disaster relief, taking the total allocated since April to at least 5.8 billion yuan.


CNA
a day ago
- CNA
Commentary: Heatwaves and jellyfish are causing the grid to wilt
SYDNEY: It's not just people who struggle to perform effectively when the temperature starts to soar. The electricity system we depend on to keep us cool is having the same problem. A swarm of jellyfish linked to unusually warm waters in northern Europe caused French utility Electricite de France to shut two nuclear power stations this week, after the invertebrates clogged up parts of their cooling systems. Other reactors in the country may have to cut output because temperatures in the Rhone and Garonne rivers are too high. In Iraq, supply to most of the country went down on Monday as millions of Shiite pilgrims descended on the city of Karbala for the Arba'in festival, spiking grid demand for fans and air conditioners as the mercury rose above 40 degrees Celsius. Even back-up equipment struggles in such conditions: With the heat rising into the 30s degrees Celsius, electricity went out and play was suspended at the Cincinnati Open tennis tournament this week, after an on-site generator apparently overheated. Power that goes out when we most need it should infuriate and frustrate but not surprise us. Most of our infrastructure is designed to perform within specific temperature ranges that the global climate is rapidly leaving behind. More and more of it is likely to start breaking as heatwaves become more intense and widespread. HARDER TO DUMP EXCESS HEAT That's particularly the case with thermal generators – those that use the heat from burning fuels or atomic decay to spin turbines and induce electrical charges. Such plants have to find a way to dump excess heat, but this gets harder as the air and water outside warm up. The result is decreasing efficiency and overheating, forcing the plants to burn more fuel for the same output, or even halt operations altogether. Those effects can be significant. The probability that a coal generator will have a forced outage goes up by 3.2 percentage points during heatwaves, while gas and nuclear are respectively 1.3 and 1 percentage points more likely to suffer an unplanned failure, according to a recent study by researchers in Sweden and Italy. Separately, Iraqi researchers found that a gas plant lost about 21 per cent of its generation potential as the temperature rose from 25 degrees Celsius to 50 degrees Celsius. Drought, which commonly occurs alongside heatwaves, makes the problem worse. Most thermal generators cool themselves by heating up water, whether it's in the sea, rivers or cooling towers. Cool water, like cool air, gets less abundant as the temperature rises. India has lost 19 days' worth of coal electricity since 2014 because water shortages have forced shutdowns, Reuters reported recently. In many areas, residents depend on tanker trucks and ever-deeper boreholes because generators are using up all of the surface water. Power stations may put more pressure on supplies of H2O between now and 2050 than the drinking water needs of its population, according to government forecasts. Conventional generators aren't the only ones to suffer. As anyone who's sat through a still, sticky summer day would recognise, wind speeds often plummet in hot weather. Since the early 1980s, the area of the globe affected by such conditions has increased by 6.3 per cent every decade, to the point that about 60 per cent of the planet is now at risk. In Australia, Siberia, and Europe, the availability of wind can now decline by 30 per cent to 50 per cent during heatwaves relative to what it would be in normal years – though a few areas, such as the northern United States, east Africa, the Amazon, and western China, experience the opposite effect. DEMAND RISES WITH THE MERCURY Even if we can solve the problem of generating energy, getting it to consumers presents challenges. Transmission cables and transformers heat up as electrons travel through their wires, and rising air temperatures make such components more susceptible to failure – especially as they're typically working harder on such days due to all the air conditioners and fans running. It's not just people who need relief from the heat. About a third of electricity consumption from data centres comes from heating and cooling to maintain stable temperatures on-site. That demand rises along with the mercury, and is becoming more pressing with the spread of artificial intelligence and cryptocurrencies. A heatwave in 2022 caused chaos at two London hospitals when their server racks shut down, scrambling the IT systems they depend on to process medical data. The rising dominance of solar panels and lithium-ion batteries, which tend to be more resilient than thermal generators and wind during heatwaves, will offer some respite. It still may not be enough. Most of our industrial civilisation, built from the energy riches unleashed by coal, oil and gas, depends on a moderate climate that their carbon emissions are throwing into disorder. The damage caused by fossil technology is going to be with us long after we've switched to cleaner ways of generating power.


CNA
2 days ago
- CNA
Portugal wildfires claim first victim, as Spain on wildfire alert
MADRID: Portugal suffered its first death Friday (Aug 15) from the fires raging there, as Spain's weather agency warned of a "very high to extreme risk" of more wildfires there during Europe's intense heatwave. Further east, Greece was still fighting blazes on one Aegean island, but the situation had improved for several other southern European countries. Portugal's President Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa announced the death of the former mayor of the eastern town of Guarda, Carlos Damaso, who had been fighting the fires. The president said he had cut short his holidays and returned to work, joining a meeting of the National Emergency and Civil Protection Authority. For days now, several thousand firefighters have been battling fires in various parts of the country. Portugal, like Spain, has invoked the EU's civil protection mechanism to ask for help, requesting four firefighting aircraft to use until Monday, its presidency said on X. In Spain, three people have died in the fires, including two young volunteers in their thirties who lost their lives trying to extinguish a blaze in the Castile and Leon area. One of them, Jaime Aparicio Vidales, was buried in the town of Quintanilla de Florez, Zamora province, Castile and Leon, on Friday. Much of the country has already endured nearly two weeks of high temperatures, and on Friday the searing heat spread to Cantabria, which had so far been spared. Temperatures in the northwestern region were forecast to pass 40C, said Aemet, the national weather agency. The risk of fires on Friday and over the weekend through to Monday was "very high or extreme in most of the country", it added. 'Nothing left to burn' Spain has endured a devastating wildfire season, with 157,501 hectares (389,193 acres) reduced to ashes since the start of the year, according to the European Forest Fire Information System (EFFIS). Yet that figure is still short of 2022, when more than 306,000 hectares went up in smoke. On Thursday, France sent two water-bombing planes to help try to douse the flames in the northwestern region, where a dozen fires were still raging. The railway line between Madrid and the northwestern region of Galicia remained closed, as well as 10 main roads. Marco Raton, 35, works on a pig farm in Sesnandez de Tabara near one of the fires in Castile and Leon that forced several thousand people to flee their homes. He and his friends did not think twice when they saw the fire arrive on Tuesday, he said. They grabbed "everything we had, backpacks, fire bats and garden hoses -- put on appropriate clothing and went over to help", he added. "As soon as we arrived, we started seeing burned people being evacuated, a car on fire, a burning tractor, warehouses, garages," he told AFP. He felt "helpless", he added. Raton had thought there was "nothing left to burn" after devastating fires in the same region in 2022. Now he was convinced that "this will continue to happen to us year after year". The mayor of Ferreruela, Angel Roman, called for fire breaks of cleared brush to be established around the villages. "The countryside, if it's clean, can stop the fire," he said. France on red alert Meteorologists in France, meanwhile, put the southern department of Aude, where a devastating fire has already killed one person and injured several others, on red alert. The fire, which broke out on Aug 5, has still not been fully extinguished and temperatures are expected to reach 40C there on Saturday. "We are in a situation of extreme vigilance," said Lucie Roesch, general secretary of the local prefecture. Further east, lower temperatures and reduced winds were helping to improve the situation in Greece and the Balkans, where rain was forecast in many parts of the region. Firefighters remained in Patras, Greece's third-largest city, monitoring scattered outbreaks. The most active blaze was still on the Mediterranean island of Chios, in the northeastern Aegean Sea, where eight aircraft have been deployed to try to douse the flames. The risk of fire remained high in the Attica region that includes the capital, Athens, and the southern Peloponnese peninsula, the Civil Protection agency warned on Friday.