Google Groups no longer supports new Usenet posts or subscriptions. Historical content remains viewable.
Dismiss

The coldest temperatures on record are hitting Asia

3 views
Skip to first unread message

Coal Power

unread,
Jan 13, 2024, 6:25:03 PMJan 13
to
Feb 2, 2023

Over the past two weeks, polar vortex-induced freezing weather has seen
all-time cold temperature records tumble across Central and Eastern Asia.
This included China's coldest temperature ever. On January 22, Mohe in the
country's northernmost Heilongjiang province recorded a chilly -53°C/-
63.4°F, the lowest temperature ever measured in China.

Previously, Tongulah in Siberia, Russia, had recorded -62.7°C/-80.9°F, a
new record low for the town. As the icy weather moved West to East,
Northern India also experienced near-record chill, while Nokkundi in the
Balochistan province of Pakistan repeated an all-time record for its
coldest-ever temperature at -10°C/+14°F. 160 people perished in
Afghanistan over the past 14 days when temperatures dropped way below
their usual levels.

On January 25 and 26, the cold hit Japan, causing several local record
lows to fall - for example in Otawara in the central Tochigi prefecture,
which recorded -16.4°C/+2.5°F. In subtropical Southern Japan, Kousa in
Kumamoto prefecture chilled down to -9°C/+15.8°F - a new record low. At
the same time, Maniwa in the Okayama prefecture's Chugoku mountains broke
its snowfall record after receiving a fresh 93 cm/36 inches in just 24
hours. While just short of a new record, Kamishihoro on Hokkaido recorded
-24.9°C/-12.8°F on January 27 - the second-coldest temperature ever in the
town and the lowest ever recorded in January. The chilly weather also
reached South Korea, Taiwan and finally Southeast Asia, but no records
were broken there.

The cold is in stark contrast with recent heatwaves that also hit the
Asian continent. According to climatologist M. Herrara via Twitter,
Myanmar at the end of January broke high temperature records for January
in two locations when the mercury approached +30°C/+86°F. Right after the
cold snap, China set new record highs for January in Yunnan province when
Kunming hit +24.1°C/+75.4°F and Yuanmou recorded +31.6°C/+88.9°F.

The polar vortex is cold air that normally circulates around the Earth's
poles but can occasionally extend further away from them. While climate
scientists are still trying to find out whether human-made alterations to
global climate can indeed make the polar vortex more unstable, climate
change is generally believed to exaccerbate extreme weather phenomena.

https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/02/coldest-temperatures-record-asia-
climate-
change/#:~:text=On%20January%2022%2C%20Mohe%20in,temperature%20ever%20meas
ured%20in%20China.
0 new messages