'Hell on earth': Experts warn the world is entering 'uncharted territory' as Northern Hemisphere...

The Daily Mail

'Hell on earth': Experts warn the world is entering 'uncharted territory' as Northern Hemisphere...

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The world is entering 'unchartered territory', experts have warned, as heatwaves hit Europe, America and simultaneously - with a Saharan blast gripping Europe, a 'heat dome' hitting the US and recording temperatures of 52.2C. The WMO warned that the heatwave was in its early phases, saying it expected temperatures in North America, Asia, North Africa and the Mediterranean to be above 40C 'for a prolonged number of days this week as the heatwave intensifies'. Europe, the world's fastest-warming continent, is bracing for the peak of the heatwave today or tomorrow, with temperatures as hot as 49C anticipated in some parts. On Sunday, the village of Sanbao in northwest China recorded the country's highest-ever temperature amid a slew of catastrophic weather phenomena, including a typhoon which hit last night and has seen around 230,000 people evacuated from their homes. The world has just experienced its hottest ever week ever recorded, and now meteorologists are saying that , with July potentially set to become the hottest month ever. Karsten Haustein, a research fellow in atmospheric radiation at Leipzig University, told The Guardian: 'The chances are that the month of July will be the hottest month ever... 'ever' meaning since the Eemian [interglacial period], which is some 120,000 years ago.' , who explained that the scorching temperatures across Europe are being driven by three key factors. These are El Nino - a warming of the ocean surface or above-average sea temperatures which disrupt air flow - a stationary high-pressure system also known as an anticyclone, and . 'Europe is not particularly affected by El Nino events directly, therefore it is likely the high-pressure system and climate change that are the main contributors to this heatwave event,' said Dr Melissa Lazenby, a lecturer in Climate Change at the University of Sussex. A graphic shared by the Met Office today shows how 'atmospheric conditions are allowing persistent strong areas of high pressure to become established'. These have intensified the heat in three separate areas - over the US, the Mediterranean and north Africa, and across Asia. The UK's national weather service warned that 'without a change in the jet stream' these hotspots 'can persist for weeks'. As Record temperatures are expected to hit Italy's islands of Sicily and Sardinia, where a high of 48C (118 degrees Fahrenheit) has been forecast by the European Space Agency. The previous European temperature record was 48.8C recorded on Sicily in 2021, according to the UN weather agency. It was already the world's hottest June on record, according to the EU weather monitoring service, and July looks set to break records as well. New records have already been recorded at various weather stations in parts of the Northern Hemisphere and new national records may also be set, according to the World Meteorological Organization. 'The heat is forecast to intensify by the middle of the week (19 July) in parts of the Mediterranean, including Greece and Turkey,' it said. 'A further continuation into August is likely.' The WMO described the heat as 'worrying news for the planet' and admitted that 'we are in uncharted territory'. The UK is not set to see scorching temperatures until the middle of next month, forecasters say, and has so far been protected with the high-pressure located further south. But while the British isles enjoys mild temperatures and cloud cover, three heatwaves are going on across the world, hitting southern Europe, the US and Asia. The sweltering heat that is stifling Europe has sparked wildfires that have ripped through holiday homes across Greece, Switzerland, Spain and Turkey, forcing thousands to evacuate from . In Greece, a wildfire intensified overnight and swept along forests north of Athens for a second day on Tuesday, as firefighters managed to contain other blazes southeast and west of the capital. Italians were warned to prepare for 'the most intense heatwave of the summer and also one of the most intense of all time' Temperatures hit a near-record 39C in Rome on Monday, with tourists pictured desperately trying to cool off in fountains around the city. American Colman Peavy could not believe the heat as he sipped a cappuccino at a cafe with his wife Ana at the start of a two-week vacation. 'We're from Texas and it's really hot there, we thought we would escape the heat but it's even hotter here,' said the 30-year-old. Spain enjoyed little reprieve, with temperatures of 44.7C reported Monday in the southern town of Jaen. In Cyprus, where temperatures are expected to remain above 40C through Thursday, a 90-year-old man died as a result of heatstroke and three other seniors were hospitalised, health officials said. In the canton of Valais, Switzerland, more than 200 firefighters worked relentlessly throughout the night to douse the flames of a roaring wildfire but the flames engulfed villas in several popular mountain villages. Meanwhile, the United States has been scorched by record-setting heat in the West and South, lashed with flood-triggering rain in the Northeast, and choked by wildfire smoke in the Midwest. A heat dome parked over the western United States pushed the temperature in California's Death Valley desert to 53C on Sunday, among the highest temperatures recorded on Earth in the past 90 years. Even in Phoenix, accustomed to hot weather, the prolonged bout of extreme heat is testing people and worrying officials. Michael Shaw, a 49-year-old encampment resident in the city, said he knows people who have already lost their lives to the extreme conditions. The international charitable organization Salvation Army has opened 11 cooling centers and sent out a mobile unit to deliver relief to homeless people who have difficulty reaching the sites. 'Extreme heat is Arizona's natural disaster. So for the Salvation Army, this is a disaster response,' said Scott Johnson, a spokesperson for the organization in the U.S. Southwest. The heat killed 425 people in the Phoenix-area's Maricopa County last year, so the Salvation Army mobile unit distributes urgently needed cold water, hats, sunscreen and hygiene kits to those in need. 'It feels like you're inside of a dryer, the dryer at the laundromat. And it's suffocating,' said Cristina Hill, an unhoused woman who benefited from the outreach on Monday and said she suffered a heat stroke last year. 'I cry all the time. I yell at the heat.' Another unhoused woman, Maritza Villegas, said she has gotten shaky and jittery from the heat, which provoked dry heaves. 'This means a whole lot - the world - because without water I'd be in the hospital right now,' Villegas said of the assistance. With sidewalks warming to temperatures of 71.1C, Mr Shaw described the heat as 'hell on Earth'. In Asia, heatstroke alerts had been issued in 32 of Japan's 47 prefectures, mainly in central and southwestern regions. At least 60 people were treated for heatstroke, media reported, including 51 taken to hospital in Tokyo. China reported a new high for mid-July in the northwest of the country, where temperatures reached 52.2C in the Xinjiang region's village of Sanbao, breaking the previous high of 50.6C set six years ago. US climate envoy John Kerry held talks with Chinese officials in Beijing, as the world's two largest polluters revive stalled diplomacy on reducing planet-warming emissions. Speaking at Beijing's Great Hall of the People with China's top diplomat Wang Yi on Tuesday, Kerry underlined the need for 'global leadership' on climate issues. Scientists have long warned that climate change, caused by CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels, will make heatwaves more frequent, severe and deadly. They say governments need to take drastic actions to reduce omissions to prevent climate catastrophe. The European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service says 2022 and 2021 were the continent's hottest summers on record. The extreme global temperatures underscored the urgency in talks that resumed between China and the United States on climate change, especially as scientists say the target of keeping global warming within 1.5 degrees Celsius of pre-industrial levels is moving beyond reach. Kerry also met with his Chinese counterpart Xie Zhenhua in Beijing, urging joint action to cut methane emissions and coal-fired power. 'In the next three days, we hope we can begin taking some big steps that will send a signal to the world about the serious purpose of China and the United States to address a common risk, threat, challenge to all of humanity created by humans themselves,' Kerry said. 'It is toxic for both Chinese and for Americans and for people in every country on the planet.'