This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-44921834
The article has changed 2 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Previous version
1
Next version
Version 0 | Version 1 |
---|---|
Japan heatwave: Temperature breaks national record | Japan heatwave: Temperature breaks national record |
(about 4 hours later) | |
Temperatures in Japan have hit a record high, with officials issuing a fresh warning to stay safe. | Temperatures in Japan have hit a record high, with officials issuing a fresh warning to stay safe. |
Japan has for days been in the grip of a deadly heatwave, although the numbers reported killed vary widely from 15 to as high as 40. | |
On Monday, the thermometer peaked at 41.1C (106F) in Kumagaya, near Tokyo, breaking the previous national record of 41C from 2013. | On Monday, the thermometer peaked at 41.1C (106F) in Kumagaya, near Tokyo, breaking the previous national record of 41C from 2013. |
More than a dozen cities have seen temperatures of about 40C. | |
Japan's disaster management agency urged people to stay in air-conditioned spaces, drink water and rest to prevent heat exhaustion. | Japan's disaster management agency urged people to stay in air-conditioned spaces, drink water and rest to prevent heat exhaustion. |
"People in areas where temperatures are as high as 35 degrees or higher should be extremely careful" to avoid heatstroke, a meteorological agency official told news agency AFP. | "People in areas where temperatures are as high as 35 degrees or higher should be extremely careful" to avoid heatstroke, a meteorological agency official told news agency AFP. |
"And even at lower temperatures, the heat can be dangerous for small children and elderly people, and depending on the environment and activities you are doing," the official warned. | "And even at lower temperatures, the heat can be dangerous for small children and elderly people, and depending on the environment and activities you are doing," the official warned. |
In Yokohama, a city south of Tokyo, people took part in an event known as uchimizu, or "water ceremony" - pouring or sprinkling cold water on to the hot pavements in an attempt to cool them. | |
Already this summer, more than 10,000 people have been taken to hospital as a result of the heat, according to the country's Kyodo news agency. | |
On Monday, a number of senior citizens died as a result of the intense heat in prefectures surrounding Tokyo, according to the local authorities. | |
A day earlier, the Tokyo Fire Department dispatched ambulances some 3,125 times within the capital, the largest figure for a day since it began emergency services in 1936, as heatstroke and exhaustion contributed to emergency calls, AFP reports. | |
Tokyo's governor, Yuriko Koike, said the recent heatwave was "exactly like living in a sauna". | |
The previous high was the 41C recorded in the western prefecture of Kochi in August 2013, the Japan Meteorological Agency says. | The previous high was the 41C recorded in the western prefecture of Kochi in August 2013, the Japan Meteorological Agency says. |
The current heatwave being the hottest on record has raised some concerns about the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. | The current heatwave being the hottest on record has raised some concerns about the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. |
Olympic officials and Tokyo's local government have been discussing measures from solar-blocking paint on roads to mobile misting stations to tackle the heat. | |
Ms Koike said the concerns were not just for the athletes participating in the games, but for spectators "who are cheering on the road". | |
"Countermeasures against heat is one of the major pillars for the success of the 2020 Olympics," she told reporters at a press conference on Monday. |
Previous version
1
Next version