'Climate change is changing our lives': The latest on extreme heat around the globe - Action News
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'Climate change is changing our lives': The latest on extreme heat around the globe

Whether it's deadly flooding in Nova Scotia,fires across Europe and in northern Africa, orsuffocating heat in the U.S. Southwest, experts say there's almost no doubt: climate change is the culprit. Here's a round-up of the latest news about extreme heat and its ripple effects from around the world.

Prolonged periods of extreme heat likely every 2 to 5 years on current track, scientists say

An elderly man lies in a bathtub on a public street.
Retired painter Julio Rodriguez, 61, relaxes in a bathtub in front of his home in Havana, Cuba, last week. (Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters)

Whether it's deadly flooding in Nova Scotia,fires across Europeorsuffocating heat in the U.S. Southwest, experts say there's almost no doubt: climate change is the culprit.

Human-induced climatechange has played an "absolutely overwhelming" role in theextreme heat waves that have swept across North America, Europeand China this month, according to a study by World Weather Attribution, a global team of scientists that examinesthe role played by climate change in extreme weather.

"European and North American temperatures would have beenvirtually impossible without the effects of climate change,"said Izidine Pinto of the Royal Netherlands MeteorologicalInstitute, one of the study's authors, during a briefing withjournalists. "In China it was around 50 times more likely tohappen compared to the past."

And for Canada specifically, there is a correlation between rising temperatures, wildfires and heavier rainfall, said Kent Moore, an atmospheric physics professor at the University of Toronto.

Rising temperatures lead to drier conditions, increasing the risk of wildfires, he said, but the warmer weather also augments the atmosphere's ability to hold moisture, leading to heavier downpours that can cause flooding.

Two men, one with his shirt off, walk through a cloud of mist on a city sidewalk at night.
People walk through misters on Monday amid the worst heat wave on record in Phoenix, Ariz. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

El Nio probably contributed to the additional heat in someregions, but rising greenhouse gases were the major factor, thescientists who wrote the global study said, and heat waves will become increasingly likelyif emissions are not slashed.

They estimated that prolonged periods of extreme heat werelikely to hit every two to five years if average globaltemperatures rise two degrees Celsiusabove pre-industrial levels. Averagetemperatures are currently estimated to have risen more than1.1 degrees.

Here's a roundup of the latest news about extreme heat and climate change from around the world.

On the Mediterranean: fires on both sides of the sea

Wildfires killed 34people in Algeria and forced the evacuation of thousands oftourists from the Greek island of Rhodes as an intense summerheat wave scorched large areas of the Mediterranean. A Canadair plane fighting afire on the Greek island of Eviacrashed, with both pilots killed.

On the islandof Rhodes, desperate residents, many with wet towels around their necks to stave off the scorching heat, used shovels to beat back flames approaching their homes, while firefighting planes and helicopters resumed water drops at first light.

A man in firefighting gear wearing a black packback, his face away from the camera, walks toward smoky trees. Overhead, a yellow prop plane drops water.
An aircraft drops water over a wildfire in Vati village, on the Aegean Sea island of Rhodes, southeastern Greece, on Tuesday. (Petros Giannakouris/The Associated Press)

Tiana Sumakovic, whose partner is Serbian basketball star and Philadelphia 76erFilipPetrusev, described frantic scenes as the pair escaped the blazeon vacation.

"The fire gotvery close and we had to run," Sumakovic wrote, captioning videos of the fire. "We were choking on the smoke and ran as far as we could ... we eventually made it to safety."

WATCH: Greece wildfire turns sky orange:

Wildfire turns sky orange in Sicily's capital

1 year ago
Duration 0:53
Video captured Tuesday shows wildfires burning in Palermo, Sicily. Temperatures have been soaring, prompting Italian officials to put several cities on 'red alert' as people struggled with scorching weather.

The heat, with temperatures topping 40 C, is well in excess of what usually attracts touristswho flock to southern European beaches.

In some parts of eastern Sicily, temperatures rose to 47.6Con Monday, close to a record European high of 48.8Crecorded on the island two years ago. So intense is the heat that Italy is preparing specialmeasures to help construction and agricultural firms keep staffat home.

It was even hotter in North Africa, with temperatures of 49Crecorded in some cities in Tunisia.

Neighbouring Algeria deployed some 8,000 firefighters tobring its deadly fires under control, authorities said.

A bald man on a bicycle turns his head toward fallen trees and a crumple of metal that was presumably a structure.
A man cycles by damages caused by a violent thunderstorm in Milan, Italy, on Tuesday. (Claudio Furlan/Lapresse/The Associated Press)

Malta, another major Mediterranean holiday destination,suffered a raft of power cuts across the country, affecting its largest hospital, after a weeklong heat wave caused underground distribution cables to overheat and fail.

Research published this month said as many as 61,000 peoplemay have died in Europe's sweltering heat waves last summer.

WATCH | The effect of prolonged heat in everyday lives:

The effect of prolonged heat in everyday lives

1 year ago
Duration 1:50
From the health of people to plants, the effects of recent heat waves around the world are being felt. Many have been suffering due to the wide-ranging impacts that heat can have on infrastructure and their way of life.

Responding to the damage caused by a dramatic overnight storm in Milan, themayor of Italy's financial capital said the cause was clear.

"I have been through 65 summers in my lifetime ... and what Iam seeing now is not normal, we can no longer deny it, climatechange is changing our lives," Mayor Giuseppe Sala said onsocial media.

In Canada: Nova Scotians worry about insurance

Amid an unprecedented year for insurance claims in the province because of post-tropical storm Fiona, wildfires and last weekend's floods, some Nova Scotians are wondering whether the latest round of damage will be covered by their insurance policies.

It was only when the frequent bursts of lightning started that Jessica Hill saw that the materials from herand her husband's planned small-scale farm and private campground in Scotch Village, N.S., were destined to float down the Herbert River.

Rainfall amounts as of 10 a.m. Sunday morning.

The couple contacted their insurance company Saturday, but it wasunclear whatwouldbe covered. They've also started a crowdfunding campaign to help them rebuild.

Lori MacLeod-Doyle of Lower Sackville, N.S., had about 70 centimetres of flooding in her basement, destroying boxes that contained paperwork and photo albums of her late husband and her father.

WATCH | N.S. not 'such a peaceful province' anymore, reflects campground owner after flooding:

N.S. not 'such a peaceful province' anymore, reflects campground owner after flooding

1 year ago
Duration 2:24
Randall Leighton tells CBC News of the rescue efforts to get people staying at his Nine Mile River, N.S., campground to safety after historic rainfall.

"Here we are three days later, almost, and still no answers as to what I should be doing, what I shouldn't be doing," said MacLeod-Doyle.

"I've been told to get rid of as much stuff out of the basement as possible by some people, and then other people have said don't touch anything. I really don't know what to do."

Jennifer MacLeod, the president of the Insurance Brokers Association of Nova Scotia, encourages people to photographthe damage, make sure everything is well documented and then begin mitigating further damage.

Other recent heat coverage from CBC News:

In politics: IMF worried about 'material risks' of climate change

The InternationalMonetary Fund on Tuesday called for better co-ordinated effortsto address the causes of climate change, warning extreme weatheris posing material risks to countries globally, especiallydeveloping economies already saddled with high debts.

IMFchief economist Pierre-Olivier Gourinchas said the caseof Argentina, which has seen a prolonged financial crisis worsened by a ferocious drought that reduced agriculturalexports by an estimated $20 billion US this year, showed how profoundly weather events could exacerbate existing strains.

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