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Politics : The Exxon Free Environmental Thread

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From: Wharf Rat8/11/2025 6:01:46 PM
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Extreme Temperature Diary- Monday August 11th, 2025/ Main Topic: Focus on Recent Middle East Heat – Guy On Climate

Dear Diary. Climate models suggest that traditionally hot climates will get much hotter more quickly than more temperate, wetter counterparts. The Middle East has fit this forecast climate pattern this year, so much so that fears that some portions will be uninhabitable soon.

Today for our main subject we will delve into sone recent heat records listed here from weather historian Maximilliano Herrera:
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Here is a recent summary of extreme heat even by Middle Eastern standards from bne Intellinews:

intellinews.com

Lake Urmia, the largest lake in Iran, is on the verge of completely drying up, and according to environmental officials, there will be no trace of water left in it by the end of the summer. / CC: IRNA Photo: Mehrdad Tabrizi

By bnm Gulf bureau & Tehran bureau July 28, 2025

Summer 2025 has turned the Middle East into a furnace. Across Syria, Iraq, Iran, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, temperatures have surged past 50°C, prompting power cuts, water shortages and silent protests in some of the world’s hottest cities. Local media and meteorological agencies across the region describe the crisis in stark terms: this is not simply an intense summer — it is a symptom of a region tipping deeper into climate breakdown.

In southern Iran, Persian-language local sources reported that temperatures in Ahvaz and Bushehr had surpassed 50°C in late July, with Tehran experiencing 40°C and water quickly diminishing in regional reservoirs. Authorities issued nationwide warnings about heatstroke risks across 18 provinces. Electricity demand overwhelmed the grid, leading to blackouts and disrupting water supply networks. Critically low water levels around the city have triggered a “red alarm” regarding Tehran’s water resources with water shortages now being reported across the capital of 12mn people.

To the west, Iraq’s Arabic-language media reported Baghdad reached 53°C, with similar readings in Basra, Maysan and Dhi Qar provinces. A report from the country’s state media agency country’s water reserves had dropped to just 8% of capacity. Protests erupted in southern cities, with demonstrators blaming the government for mismanagement of the crisis, exacerbated by years of political turmoil and climate neglect.

In Syria’s northeast, the searing heat has led to widespread shutdowns. Al-Araby al-Jadeed described how marketplaces in Hasakah and Qamishli emptied as thermometers topped 48°C. The silence, one resident said, was ‘like a curfew’. The Syrian Meteorological Department has issued continuous alerts since mid-July, though official data remain limited due to the country’s fragmented governance.

Meanwhile in Kuwait, Arabic daily Al-Sharq reported that temperatures climbed to 52°C, with the national meteorological office calling it the most severe heatwave in a decade. Persian-language outlet Iranian Kuwait confirmed forecasts predicting 51°C for central and coastal areas. Health officials warned residents to stay indoors between 11am and 4pm and cancelled several public events.

Saudi Arabia has not been spared. According to Asharq Al-Awsat and ArabiaWeather, temperatures across the Eastern Province, including Dammam and Al-Ahsa, surpassed 50°C. Municipalities distributed bottled water and shade shelters in an attempt to mitigate the health risks, particularly for outdoor workers.

Dr Diana Francis, a regional climate scientist quoted by Arabi21, warned earlier in May that the Gulf and Levant now sit within one of the planet’s emerging heat epicentres. “We’re entering an era of prolonged heat domes,” she said. “Without adaptation policies and emission reductions, parts of the Middle East could become nearly uninhabitable in summer within decades.”

The common thread in these reports — whether from Persian or Arabic media — is not only the extreme temperatures but the growing strain on fragile infrastructure and social systems. Electricity grids collapse under record demand. Hospitals brace for dehydration cases. Drought dries rivers and reservoirs.

The summer of 2025 may well be remembered not just for the unbearable heat but as the season the Middle East was forced to reckon with its vulnerability. For millions across the region, the choice is no longer between mitigation and delay — it is between action and collapse.

As IntelliNews previously reported, Turkey was hit by a scorching temperature of 50° Celsius for the first time in recorded history on July 25.

“This is climate change, and it’s accelerating,” was the response from weather site Met4Cast.

“This isn’t just a heatwave, It’s the edge of human survival. In low humidity, just 30 minutes of exposure risks heat stroke. Increasing humidity shortens that time,” it added.

The record-shattering temperature was measured at 50.5° Celsius (122.9 degrees Fahrenheit) in Silopi, Sirnak province, near the border with Syria, by the Turkish State Meteorological Service. The highest ever temperature recorded in Europe is the 48.8° Celsius experienced by Sicily, Italy, in August 2021.

The entire West Asia region now faces one of its most complex and deepest environmental crises – a crisis that, according to Energy Minister Abbas Ali-Abadi, has been unprecedented in six decades and can only be addressed through reduced consumption and precise management to increase “resilience” across the region.

Here are more “ET’s” recorded from around the planet the last couple of days, their consequences, and some extreme temperature outlooks, as well as any extreme precipitation reports:

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