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France sees record heat for September; Hong Kong breaks heat record twice by AFP Staff Writers Bordeaux (AFP) Sept 12, 2022 France saw record temperatures for September hit the country, notably the south west, amid a heatwave drifting up from Morocco, the Meteo-France weather service said Monday. The thermometer hit 39.1 degrees Celsius (102.4 degrees Fahrenheit) at Mont-de-Marsan in the southwestern Landes department and 39C at nearby Dax. Regional capital Bordeaux saw 37.5C -- topping a previous September high of 37C in 1987 -- while Tarbes further south in the Pyrenees saw 37.2C, more than a degree up on the 35.8C seen in 1964. Neighbouring Pau managed to beat that with a baking 38.9C, easily surpassing the 36.3C it had seen in 1970. Even some 600 kilometres (370 miles) further north, in Nantes, temperatures were a barely less scorching 35.1C, unheard of for the area in September. The intense heat -- coming on the back of a scorching summer which saw a series of horrific wildfires in the southwest -- results from "hot air coming up from Morocco and propelled by a depression, the post-tropical cyclone Danielle, currently off the coast of Portugal", a Meteo-France forecaster told AFP. France saw three heatwaves between June and August, the result of an air depression in the Atlantic Ocean as scientists lined up to blame the phenomenon at least partly on climate change. This summer was France's second-hottest on record with average temperatures 2.3C above the norm, a slew of large-scale wildfires which ravaged much of the southwest and widespread drought as well as several severe storms. Another large forest fire raged Monday at Saumos on Bordeaux's western outskirts as firefighters reported the evacuation of some 200 local people as a precaution, French media reported. Firefighters were aided by three planes and two helicopters as they prepared to work through the night to tackle the flames. They said the blaze had ripped through some 350 hectares (870 acres) in a region which saw more than 30,000 hectares incinerated over recent months. A smaller fire further east at Herm, outside Dax, affected another 45 hectares. Forecasters said in contrast to the summer the current hot weather would not last, with a dip in temperatures starting from midweek, remaining above 30C on Tuesday before returning to normal by the weekend. Meteo-France added that some areas, including the lower Rhone valley, would likely see heavy rain and intermittent violent storms.
Hong Kong September heat record broken twice The Hong Kong Observatory said a temperature of 35.4 degrees Celsius (95.7 Fahrenheit) was recorded on Tuesday afternoon, "once again breaking the record for highest temperature in September" since the city started keeping records in 1884. The previous high of 35.3C was set just last Monday, toppling a record that had stood since 1963. "Due to dry air from mainland (China), we expect the weather to be sunny and hot from this week to early next week," the observatory added. Southern China last month recorded its longest continuous period of high temperatures since records began more than 60 years ago, sparking power cuts and droughts that have hit the agricultural and manufacturing sectors. Experts have said the intensity, scope and duration of the heatwave could make it one of the most severe recorded in global history, with temperatures routinely hitting up to 40C in many provinces last month. Those temperatures in mainland China have since come down. Intensely humid Hong Kong has experienced less searing heat than the mainland but has still sizzled through an intense summer. July was the city's hottest month on record while the average temperature from June to August was 29.2C, making it the fourth hottest summer so far. The high temperatures have been especially punishing for the 220,000 poorest residents who live in cramped rooftop huts or tiny subdivided apartments and "cage homes" that often have limited or no air conditioning.
Heatwave batters Spain's Mediterranean mussel crop Deltebre, Spain (AFP) Sept 9, 2022 "There's nothing left here," sighs Javier Franch as he shakes the heavy rope of mussels he's just pulled to the surface in northeastern Spain. They are all dead. With the country hit by a long and brutal heatwave this summer, the water temperature in the Ebro Delta, the main mussels production area of the Spanish Mediterranean, is touching 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit). And any grower who hasn't removed their molluscs in time will have lost everything. But that's not the worst ... read more
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