Tens of thousands of people in drought-affected villages in north India have left their homes because they do not have any drinking water either for themselves or for their cattle.But hey, Rowan Dean's wearing a funny tie; rich retirees travel the world and see shrinking glaciers (one of the clearest markers of global climate change) and say "natural variation"; and Al Gore made some incorrect predictions. [Just my routine go at the incredible non-seriousness of everyone associated with Catallaxy.]
Even in the state of Jammu and Kashmir in the Himalayas, where many Indians go to escape the summer heat, the temperature has reached 39C.
The rush to the higher ground resulted in huge traffic jams at the weekend that snaked around the mountains. People had to sleep in their cars because towns such as Shimla and Nainital – known as hill stations from the days of the British Raj – had no spare hotel rooms.
“It was unbelievable. The hills were alive and heaving with cars and SUVs and a journey that should take one hour took five,” said Sumith Verma, a Nainital resident.
About two-thirds of the country has been affected by the blistering heat, which looks set to become the longest heatwave the country has ever experienced.
Tuesday, June 18, 2019
How's that Indian heatwave going?
Some rains have arrived, but the death toll (such that is known - again I have extreme doubts about accurate numbers on this) has risen. What's more, it was a pretty bad scene in some areas, apparently:
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