Coastal cooling, but still blazing hot inland on Wednesday

CONCORD — A cooling breeze brought some relief early Wednesday along the coast but triple-digit misery was still in store for inland communities as a historic heat wave kept the San Francisco Bay Area in its sweaty grip.

An excessive heat warning remained in effect for much of the Bay Area until 8 p.m. on Thursday.

“In general we are seeing a few degrees of cooling compared to 24 hours ago but of course yesterday was an historic day in terms of heat,” the National Weather Service said. “So expect another hot day inland with some noticeable cooling near the coastline.”

Heat records tumbled across the region on Tuesday. Livermore matched its one-day-old record for the hottest day of all time with another 116 degree scorcher.

Santa Rosa’s 115 topped the 113 set on Sept. 6, 1913. Napa’s 114 eclipsed the 113 recorded in 1961. Redwood City’s mark of 110 tied its daily record set in 1972 and San Jose’s 109 was a degree warmer than the record set in 2017.

And how hot did it get Concord? The blazing 112 degrees was enough to kink BART’s steel rails, forcing the shutdown of the Antioch line during the evening commute.

Among those commuters stranded was Kaitlyn Schaefer.

“It’s really hot,” Schaefer said as she waited for her ride. “I’m more calm now that I know someone is coming to get me.”  

KPIX 5 First Alert Weather: Current Conditions, Forecasts, Alerts For Your Area

On Wednesday morning at Livermore’s McGrail winery and vineyards, work crews took to the fields in the pre-dawn darkness to beat the oppressive heat.

“I wear very thin everything,” a worker named Lizbeth said. “I make everything is covered so I don’t get burned by the sun. As long as my head and face are covered, I’m really good.”

While the state power grid operator was able to hold off using rolling blackouts to control the historic demand for electricity, thousands were without power in Bay Area after the intense heat overwhelmed transformers.

Some 35,700 people lost electricity in Silicon Valley and southern and inland areas of the San Francisco Bay Area and most of the outages were heat-related, said Jason King of Pacific Gas & Electric said Tuesday evening.   

While it may have been some overnight cooling on Monday, it wasn’t enough to help give PG&E’s equipment a much-needed break from the intense stress.

“We don’t have that overnight cooling that helps the equipment really get a break,” said Aaron Johnson, the Vice President of PG&E’s Bay Area Region. “And so we are seeing a fair number of pieces of equipment go out of service. And we’re doing everything to replace that equipment on the fly.”

For all the latest Automobiles News Click Here 

 For the latest news and updates, follow us on Google News

Read original article here

Denial of responsibility! TheDailyCheck is an automatic aggregator around the global media. All the content are available free on Internet. We have just arranged it in one platform for educational purpose only. In each content, the hyperlink to the primary source is specified. All trademarks belong to their rightful owners, all materials to their authors. If you are the owner of the content and do not want us to publish your materials on our website, please contact us by email – [email protected] The content will be deleted within 24 hours.