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The heatwave that hit parts of the west coast of North America shattered records by several degrees. It affected parts of the United States and Canada that were unused to extreme heat. Hundreds of people died and emergency teams were pushed to their limits. In Lytton, Canada, temperatures reached 49.6 degrees celsius. Days later, the entire village burnt down.
Scientists say that climate change had made this heatwave 150 times more likely. They also warn that, if global warming continues, about one-third of the world’s population will become threatened by extreme heat.
So does our attitude to extreme heat need to change?
Joining presenters Neal Razzell and Manuela Saragosa:
Bob Ward, policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment
By BBC World Service4.4
167167 ratings
The heatwave that hit parts of the west coast of North America shattered records by several degrees. It affected parts of the United States and Canada that were unused to extreme heat. Hundreds of people died and emergency teams were pushed to their limits. In Lytton, Canada, temperatures reached 49.6 degrees celsius. Days later, the entire village burnt down.
Scientists say that climate change had made this heatwave 150 times more likely. They also warn that, if global warming continues, about one-third of the world’s population will become threatened by extreme heat.
So does our attitude to extreme heat need to change?
Joining presenters Neal Razzell and Manuela Saragosa:
Bob Ward, policy and communications director at the Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment

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