Article 6089Q India isn’t ready for a deadly combination of heat and humidity

India isn’t ready for a deadly combination of heat and humidity

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WIRED
from Ars Technica - All content on (#6089Q)
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R Lakshmanan has been making steel frames in the southern Indian city of Chennai for 20 years. His job involves standing for long hours outdoors at construction sites, pounding screws with careful precision onto steel rods. Each day he makes nearly 600 frames, which end up becoming the skeleton of a home. Often he works 12-hour shifts, beginning at 6 am. He always feels fortunate when he gets to work under a shady tree.

But this year, that protection hasn't been enough. Ever since temperatures in March hit a sizzling 38 Celsius-4 above normal for Chennai-the conditions have been stifling. The metal frames Lakshmanan works with have been too hot to touch, the steel burning his fingertips and leaving behind painful sores. He has seen construction workers, especially women, collapse around him, and has had to take breaks during the workday to cope with fits of dizziness and nausea. On some days, there's so much heat, it feels like you're living in a fireball," he says.

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