SEOUL, South Korea
At least 16 people have died
from heat-related illnesses in South Korea as the country
swelters under a prolonged heat wave with temperatures above 38 degrees Celsius
(100 Fahrenheit) in some parts of the country.People pray under a sunshade to avoid the heat at the Chogye temple in Seoul on Wednesday.
The deaths, which have all
happened since May, far exceed those over the same period last year, when six
people died from heat-related illnesses, the Korea Disease Control and
Prevention Agency (KDCA) said Wednesday.
A total of 1,284 people
reported suffering heat-related illnesses as of Tuesday, according to KDCA.
South Korea has raised the
heat wave warning to the highest “serious” level for the first time since 2019,
the interior and safety ministry said Wednesday.
Heat wave warnings have
expanded to most of the country since late July as temperatures rose over 33
degrees Celsius (around 91 Fahrenheit).
On Tuesday, the highest
temperatures of the day were reported Gyeonggi Province’s Yeoju city with 38.4
degrees Celsius (101.1 Fahrenheit), and Anseong city 38.2 degree Celsius (100.8
Fahrenheit), according to the interior and safety ministry.
To cope with the continuing
heat wave, local authorities are regularly checking on vulnerable populations
and setting up cooling facilities such as shade tents and sun umbrella rentals.
There are also fears for the
health of outdoor workers, who are particularly exposed to the high
temperatures. “Under the current conditions, construction workers’ heat deaths
are ‘expected deaths,’” the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions said in a
statement, according to a Reuters report.
Extreme weather has devastated large parts of Asia this summer. Parts of China and Japan have faced both blistering heat waves and torrential rains, causing landslides and flash
flooding.
Scientists are clear that the human-caused climate crisis is making extreme
weather both more frequent and more intense.
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