Mass crowds of people attempt to
cool off at a water park in Suining, Sichuan province on Saturday, July
27, amid a record heat wave hitting 19 provinces and regions in China.
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China reckons with heat wave
Record-breaking temperatures have been searing large swaths of China,
resulting in dozens of heat-related deaths and prompting authorities to
issue a national alert.
People are packing into
swimming pools or taking refuge in caves in their attempts to escape the
fierce temperatures. Local governments are resorting to cloud-seeding
technology to try to bring rain to millions of acres of parched
farmland.
The worst of the
smoldering heat wave has been concentrated in the south and east of the
country, with the commercial metropolis of Shanghai experiencing its
hottest July in at least 140 years, according to state media.
Temperatures in the
sprawling city of 23 million inhabitants reached 35 degrees Celsius (95
degrees Fahrenheit) or higher on 25 days in July, the state-run news
agency Xinhua reported Wednesday. More than 10 people died from
heatstroke in Shanghai during the month, it said.
But the brutal temperatures aren't confined to the Shanghai region.
Heat wave - how hot is it?
"About 19 provinces and
regions are experiencing scorching heat, covering more than 3 million
square kilometers, almost a third of the country," He Lifu, chief
weather forecaster at the National Meteorological Center, told the
English-language newspaper China Daily.
The China Meteorological
Administration issued its second-highest national heat alert on Tuesday,
China Daily reported, adding that the highest alert has never been
used.
Photos carried by state
media showed people frying food like eggs, shrimp and bacon in pans
placed on the road surface in some cities.
In Shanghai, the heat was
being blamed for mounting numbers of dead fish in ponds and rivers,
reported Shanghai Daily, an English-language newspaper.
Some of the highest
temperatures were clocked in and around the eastern city of Hangzhou,
about 100 kilometers southwest of Shanghai.
The thermometer went
above 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) in Hangzhou on six out
of seven days in the past week, state media reported. In the district
of Xiaoshan, it reached 42.2 degrees Celsius (about 108 Fahrenheit) on
Tuesday, the highest temperature recorded for the area.
Seven cities and
counties in the surrounding province of Zhejiang used cloud-seeding
techniques on Tuesday to bring rain to drought-hit farmland, China Daily
said.
Forecasters say the aggressive heat is likely to continue into the middle of August.
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