Thailand and Israel are experiencing severe heatwaves, leading to significant impacts on public health and weather records. In Thailand, the heat index has reached 'extremely dangerous' levels, resulting in 30 deaths due to heatstroke. The Thai government has issued warnings as Bangkok faces near-record temperatures. Concurrently, Tel Aviv has recorded its hottest April temperatures since 1907, breaking the previous record set in 1939. This heatwave, which has been described as made more likely by climate change, has brought temperatures up to 40 degrees Celsius in Tel Aviv.
Record-breaking heat wave hits Israel https://t.co/u5UMWtso5o
A heat wave in Israel that began earlier this week peaked Thursday, with temperatures reaching 85-year-highs https://t.co/u5UMWtso5o
Wave of exceptionally hot weather scorches south and south-east Asia https://t.co/BiOltbxQgm
Tel Aviv temperatures shatter 85-year April record as heatwave scorches country https://t.co/W2eGwigS8N
Remarkable that +40 degrees Celsius has already hit Tel Aviv in an April heatwave. Made more likely by climate change for sure. https://t.co/3HTtg5tLsZ
Coincidentally: Live Update: Weather in Tel Aviv breaks city’s record for hottest April day, surpassing previous high recorded in 1939 https://t.co/FnpmGJ9cjS via @timesofisrael
Tel Aviv recorded the hottest April temperatures since 1907 today. It's 38°C, when the average high for this month is 23°C. This is how hot it feels 🌞 #globalwarming https://t.co/zPchdz2dst
Bangkok is battling near-record temperatures as the death toll rises from extreme heat across Thailand https://t.co/YAePwNeGWQ
Thailand issues warning as heatstroke kills 30 https://t.co/dfvMoB0Vql
Hot weather kills 30 in Thailand as heat index hits ‘extremely dangerous’ level https://t.co/qWDBuK1hFE