Grim new death records as brutal heat plagues US south-west into the autumn
September has offered little reprieve after a sweltering summer, with Las Vegas on 102nd day of temperatures above 100F
Gabrielle Canon
Fri 27 Sep 2024 16.02 EDT
Brutal heat continues to plague the south-west US, with excessive heat alerts lingering long into September as parts of the region set grim new records for deaths connected to the sweltering temperatures.
Autumn has offered little reprieve for cities that have already spent months mired in triple-digit temperatures. This week, Las Vegas, Nevada; Phoenix, Arizona; and Palm Springs, California, are all grappling with severe weather, with highs that have pushed over 100F (38C). More than 16 million people in the US were under heat alerts on Friday, according to the National Weather Service, mostly clustered in the southern tips of Nevada, Arizona and California.
Late-season heat is dangerous because people are fatigued from fighting heat all summer, the NWS forecast office in Las Vegas
cautioned in an alert, which warned of extreme weather expected to last through the weekend and into next week. This is especially true this year, it added, as 2024 continues to break all-time heat records.
In Arizonas Maricopa county, home to Phoenix,
664 fatalities are believed to have been linked to the heat this year , according to public health officials, who are still working to confirm more than half of them. Southern Nevada, where Las Vegas is located, has seen more deaths this year than in any year prior, with officials confirming this week that there have been 342 fatalities linked to the heat. This surpassed last years record, which marked an 80% increase over 2022.