North

Heat records broken across N.W.T. with more hot days ahead

A heat record was first set on Tuesday and then beat on Wednesday in Fort McPherson, N.W.T., with temperatures reaching 34 C in the community above the Arctic Circle. 

Fort McPherson set 2 all-time records, 1 day after the next

A person drinking water.
Much of the N.W.T. has been under a heat warning this week, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. (Bert Savard/CBC)

Fort McPherson, N.W.T., has seen two all-time heat records this week, according to Environment and Climate Change Canada. 

A heat record was first set on Tuesday and then beat on Wednesday, with temperatures reaching 34 C in the community above the Arctic Circle. 

That's also 18 degrees warmer than normal for this time of year, according to David Phillips, a senior climatologist with Environment and Climate Change Canada.

"I was really just aghast," Phillips said. "The warmest temperatures in Canada were found north of the Arctic Circle, in Inuvik and Fort McPherson."

Phillips said it's not only the heat that's affecting people, but the number of days in a row under extreme heat. 

"When they go two, or three or four, or seven days, it really begins to affect people," he said. "It's not healthy."

Heat warnings across N.W.T., parts of Nunavut, Yukon

Phillips said that record could be broken again in Fort McPherson on Thursday, if it reaches 35 C, which is expected. 

"Boy, I have been in this business for a long time, and I am just shaking my head at these temperatures," Phillips said.

And it's not just Fort McPherson — there are heat warnings across the territory, and in Yukon and Nunavut.

In Kugluktuk, Nunavut, the seasonal "normal" for August would see daytime highs of around 14 C, but Thursday's forecast calls for 31 C and 33 C on Friday. 

There are heat warnings stretching from the Dehcho region in the N.W.T., as far north as Ulukhaktok, and across to Cambridge Bay, Nunavut, and Old Crow, Yukon. Parts of southern Yukon were also under a heat warning on Thursday, including Whitehorse.

Tanya Gruben, who grew up in Tuktoyaktuk, N.W.T., and now lives in Inuvik, said she's didn't experience heat like this growing up.  

"How can you go outside to hunt or fish in this?" she said. 

Gruben, who has air conditioning at home, said people are swimming in the river and in lakes around Inuvik to stay cool. 

"I am staying inside, I'm not doing anything. I'm staying where the cold air is," Gruben said. 

There have been heat warning this week for the MacKenzie Delta, Sahtu and Dehcho regions - Shannon Scott talked to Canada's favourite climatologist about why we're seeing temperatures in the mid-30s across those regions. 

With files from Shannon Scott