Currently, many areas of South Asia are facing a severe heat wave that began in March, when temperature several degrees higher than the multi-year average.
According to the Bureau of Meteorology IndiaThe country experienced its hottest March in more than a century. Many areas in the north, west and east India recorded a temperature increase of more than 40 degrees Celsius in April.



Photos of Indian people in the time of record heat
Temperatures in many parts of India and Pakistan recently regularly exceeded 50 degrees Celsius, severely damaging crops and people’s lives.
The hot weather combined with the phenomenon of “wet bulb temperature” is challenging the tolerance limit of the Indian people. The wet bulb temperature is the lowest unit of temperature that can be achieved when the air is saturated with water vapor, usually no more than 31°C.
When the wet-bulb temperature is above 35°C, the air cannot absorb more water vapor, causing sweat to not evaporate, causing people to experience the following phenomena: thermal shock such as fatigue, cramps, rashes, especially heatstroke with the risk of death within hours.




The western Indian state of Maharashtra has reported 25 heat-related deaths since late March, the highest number in five years.
More than 1 billion people in India and neighboring Pakistan are also vulnerable to extreme heat, experts warn, as monsoon rains-inducing troughs are expected to appear only this month. and power outages are becoming more and more frequent in many areas.
The temperature in New Delhi during the day reaches 44 degrees Celsius and does not fall below 30 degrees Celsius at night. The huge Bhalswa garbage mountain in the northern suburbs of New Delhi has continued to burn since April 26, making the sweltering air in the city even more heavily polluted.
Source: Synthesis
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