The Sunday temperature broke a previous record of 50.3 degrees,measured in 2015 near Ayding in the depression,a vast basin of sand dunes and dried-up lakes more than 150 metres below sea level.
Since April,countries across Asia have been hit by several rounds of record-breaking heat,stoking concerns about their ability to adapt to a rapidly changing climate. The target of keeping long-term global warming within 1.5 degrees is moving out of reach,climate experts say.
Prolonged bouts of high temperatures in China have challenged power grids and crops,and concerns are mounting of a possible repeat of last year’s drought,the most severe in 60 years.
China is no stranger to dramatic swings in temperatures across the seasons,but the swings are getting wider.
On January 22,temperatures in Mohe,a city in northeastern Heilongjiang province,plunged to minus 53 degrees,according to the local weather bureau,smashing China’s previous all-time low of minus 52.3 degrees set in 1969.
Since then,the heaviest rains in a decade have hit central China,ravaging wheat fields in an area known as the country’s granary.