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Vietnam Records Highest-Ever Temperature

AFP

Vietnam has recorded its highest-ever temperature, 44.1 degrees Celsius since record-keeping began with experts warning that it would soon be surpassed in the near future because of changes in climatic conditions.

The record was set in the northern province of Thanh Hoa on Saturday, where officials warned people to stay indoors during the hottest times of the day.

Scientists in the country stated that the raging global warming is having an adverse effect on the weather as a result of which the country and others in the region recorded multiple heatwaves in the month of April.

In Thailand, a record-equalling 44.6C in its western Mak province was recorded.

Meanwhile, Myanmar’s media reported that a town in the east had recorded 43.8C, the highest temperature for a decade.

Both countries experience a hot period before the monsoon season but the intensity of the heat has broken previous records.

In Hanoi, climate change expert Nguyen Ngoc Huy told AFP that Vietnam’s new record was “worrying” given the “context of climate change and global warming”.

“I believe this record will be repeated many times,” he said. “It confirms that extreme climate models are being proven to be true.”

The world has already warmed by about 1.1C since the industrial era began and temperatures will keep rising unless governments make steep cuts to emissions.

In Vietnam’s central city of Danang, farmer Nguyen Thi Lan told AFP the heat was forcing workers to start earlier than ever and finish by 10:00.

Vietnam’s previous record temperature of 43.4C was set in central Ha Tinh province four years ago.
In March 2023 climate scientists said a key global temperature goal was likely to be missed.

Governments had previously agreed to act to avoid global temperature rises going above 1.5C. But the world has already warmed by 1.1C and now experts say that it is likely to breach 1.5C in the 2030s.

In its report, the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change said “Every increment of global warming will intensify multiple and concurrent hazards”

 

By Dare Akogun

Dare Akogun

Dare Akogun is a media innovator, strategic communication professional, and climate and energy transition journalist with over 11 years of impactful contributions to the media industry.

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