Vancouver: Death score in the Canadian Vancouver area is likely related to a tiring heat wave, the authorities say on Tuesday, because the country records the highest temperature amid the heat of its heat extends to the northwest of the US.
At least 134 people died suddenly since Friday in the Vancouver area, according to the numbers issued by the City Police Department and the Royal Canadian police installed.
The Vancouver Police Department itself said that he had responded more than 65 sudden deaths since Friday, with a large majority “related to heat.” Death came when Canada set a high-temperature record of all time new for the third day in a row on Tuesday, reaching 121 degrees Fahrenheit (49.5 degrees Celsius) in Lytton, British Columbia, about 155 miles (250 kilometers) East Vancouver, the weather service Country, Canadian environment, reported.
“Vancouver has never experienced heat like this, and unfortunately dozens of people dying therefore,” said Sergeant Police Steve Addison.
Other local cities said they had also responded to many sudden death calls, but had not released a highway.
Climate change causes the temperature of the record setting to become more frequent.
Globally, the decade until 2019 is the hottest recorded, and the hottest five years all have occurred in the last five years.
The heat that was destroyed stretched from the US Oregon state to the Canadian Arctic region was blamed on pastures that cut down warm air in the region.
Temperature in the US Pacific Northwest Cities of Portland, Oregon and Seattle, Washington reached a level that was not seen since the record of the registering began in the 1940s: 115 degrees Fahrenheit in Portland and 108 in Seattle on Monday.
Vancouver on the Pacific Coast has a temperature recorded several days above 86 degrees Fahrenheit (or nearly 20 degrees above seasonal norms).
In the interior along the Fraser River Delta, because of high humidity, the climatologist said it was like 111 degrees Fahrenheit on Tuesday.
Coroner’s head for the British Columbia Province, which includes Vancouver, said that “experiencing a significant increase in the deaths reported where extreme heat allegedly contributed.” The service said in the statement recorded 233 deaths between Friday and Monday, compared with an average of 130.
“We are in the midst of the most hottest weeks, British Columbian has experienced, and there are consequences for it, the consequences of disaster for families and for the community , “British Columbia Premier John Horgan said at a press conference.
“How we pass this extraordinary period is to gather together,” he said.
He urges “Checking the people we know may be at risk, ensure we have cold compresses in the fridge or we live in the coolest part of our home, and ensure that we take steps to pass this heat wave.” Canada’s environment has been issued a warning for British Columbia, Alberta, and several parts of Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Yukon and the northwest region, by saying “Prolonged Heatwaves, dangerous and historic will last during this week.” US National Weather Service issued a similar warning, urging people to “live in air-conditioned buildings, avoiding heavy outside activities, drinking lots of water, and checking family members / neighbors.” The heat wave has forced the school and the Covid-19 vaccination center to close in the Vancouver area, while officials set up a temporary fountain and drizzle station in the street corners.
The shops were quickly sold out of portable air conditioners and fans, so some people without cooling at home told their AFP squatting in an air-conditioned car or underground parking garage at night.
Cities throughout the United States west and Canada open the emergency cooling center and outreach workers distribute bottles of water and hats.
In Eugene in Oregon, the organizers were forced to adjust the last day of the US Olympic track and trial of the field, moving in the evening night.
Extreme heat, combined with intense drought, also creates perfect conditions for some fires to exit weekends, and one fire on the California-Oregon border has burned around 1,500 hectares (600 hectares) on Monday morning.
“Dubai will be cooler than we see now,” David Phillips, a senior climatologist for the Canadian neighborhood, told AFP on Monday.