Published: August 5,2015
Mind-boggling combinations of heat and humidity continued to emerge in cities near the Persian Gulf Wednesday, sending feels-like temperatures toward the 160-degree mark yet again as relentless heat continued to broil much of the region.
Even in the Middle East, where scorching heat is part of everyday life during the summer, coping with extreme temperatures has its limits. A heat wave that has been building for days is testing those limits – and is testing the region's national temperature records too.
The searing heat led to an impromptu, mandatory four-day holiday in Iraq beginning last Thursday.
Nearly a week later, on Wednesday of this week, the southeastern Iraqi city of Samawah reported a temperature of 119.5 degrees Fahrenheit (48.6 degrees Celsius) and a dewpoint of 85.1 F (29.5 C), yielding a feels-like temperature of 159 F (71 C).
The government has urged residents to stay out of the sun and drink plenty of water, but for many of the more than 3 million Iraqis displaced by violent conflict, that poses a dilemma.
Current Conditions: Iraq, Iran, Kuwait
Basrah has been near the epicenter of the heat wave. The city's high exceeded 120 F (48.9 C) for eight straight days before falling a pinch short Monday at 119.3 F (48.5 C). Still, Monday continued a long string of highs at or above 110 F (43.3 F); that string reached 39 days Wednesday.
To the north, Baghdad logged four consecutive days in the 120s last Wednesday through Saturday, and returned to the 120s Tuesday and Wednesday. The Iraqi capital has reached at least 100 F (37.8 C) every day since May 30.
(FORECAST: Baghdad)
The forecast calls for more punishing heat. Highs in the Baghdad area are likely to hover near 120 F (49 C) for much of this week. Cities in southeastern Iraq may push 125 F (52 C) later this week. Nighttime lows are forecast to remain in the 30 to 35 C range (86 to 95 F).
Unlike other countries in the region, Iraq lacks beaches and travel restrictions make it difficult for people to escape the sweltering heat, leaving many - even those fortunate enough to live in their homes - with limited options for cooling off. Some swim in rivers and irrigation canals, while others spend these days in air-conditioned shopping malls.
Current Heat Index (Feels-Like Temperature)
Water temperatures in the Persian Gulf routinely warm into the 90s each summer, releasing massive amounts of water vapor into the air above. For those unlucky enough to catch a breeze from the Gulf, the humidity can be stifling.
Last Thursday, those breezes blew toward the Iranian side of the Gulf. At 3:30 p.m. local time (1100 GMT) Thursday, the manned observation site at the Mahshahr Airport in southwest Iran reported a temperature of 109 F (43 C) and a dewpoint of 90 F (32 C). Using the American heat index formula, those figures yielded a mind-boggling feels-like temperature of 159 F (70 C).
It was even hotter last Friday at the Mahshahr Airport when temperatures reached 114.8 F at 4:30 pm local time with a dew point of 89.6 F, leading to a heat index value of an incredible 164 F (73 C).
The
heat index, or feels-like temperature, for selected cities in the
Persian Gulf region at noon GMT on July 31, 2015. Parts of coastal Iran
have been suffering from a brutal combination of triple-digit heat from
the deserts and extremely high humidity originating from the waters of
the Persian Gulf.
Mahshahr has been on a bit of a cooling trend since then; the heat index peaked at 155 F (68 C) on Saturday and 142 F (61 C) Sunday. Monday's heat index there actually peaked before sunrise, when the actual temperature of 93.2 F (34 C) felt like 130 F (55 C). After sunrise, lower humidity levels took the heat index down into the 120s.
Several other locations, however, have joined in the misery. The southeastern Iranian city of Jask reported a feels-like temperature of 156 F (69 C) on Friday. Feels-like temperatures topped 130 F (55 C) Sunday in several other Iranian coastal cities, as well as in Qatar. The feels-like temperature reached 128 F (53 C) in Bahrain.
It is not uncommon for well-off Gulf citizens to decamp with their luxury cars and servants to cooler spots such as Britain or Switzerland as temperatures rise. Last week Saudi Arabia's King Salman, joined by a delegation numbering in the hundreds, was cooling off in the south of France, where high temperatures have been in the 80s F (28 to 32 C) in recent days.
Several Gulf states, including the United Arab Emirates, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, mandate midday breaks when temperatures are at their highest for low-paid migrant laborers during the summer months. But that only provides some relief as many still spend long hours working in the heat and travel to job sites on buses without air conditioning.
Five-Day Forecast
(FORECAST: Dubai)
Another of the hottest spots in the Gulf was Kuwait City, where the official high last Thursday was 121.3 F (49.6 C). The civil aviation authority's meteorological department forecast daytime conditions as "very hot" and overnight temperatures as "relatively hot," with moderate winds providing little relief.
Kuwaitis nonetheless took it in stride.
Nazem al-Ghabra, 31, who works in corporate communications, told the Associated Press: "We're used to this weather, and Kuwait is well-equipped for this harsh weather as almost everything is indoors, even car parking."
While Kuwait may be well-equipped for heat, this episode promises to be among the more extreme in modern recordkeeping.
Climatologist Maximiliano Herrera says Kuwait's national all-time record high is 53.6 degrees Celsius (128.5 degrees Fahrenheit) set at Sulaibya on July 31, 2012. The high reached 52.8 C (127.0 F) at Mitribah, Kuwait, on July 30. So far that is the highest temperature in Kuwait during this heat wave.
According to Herrera, the national heat records for both Iraq and Iran are both 53.0 C (127.4 degrees F) set in a heat wave at this time of year in 2011. (In Iran the record was tied in August 2014.)
The hottest temperature in Iraq in this heat wave was in Kanaqin, where the high on July 30 hit 52.0 C (125.6 degrees Fahrenheit). The capital, Baghdad, wasn't far behind at 51 degrees Celsius (123.8 degrees Fahrenheit); this appears to have tied the modern all-time record high for that city.
The World Meteorological Organization says the official record-high temperature for Asia, of which the Middle East is a part, is 129 degrees (54 degrees Celsius) set at Tivat Tsvi, Israel, on June 21, 1942. Herrera says this record is unreliable and lists the 2012 Kuwait record as Asia's record.
Information from the Associated Press was used in this report.
MORE: Iraqi Heat Wave, July 2015
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