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Heat, cyclones and blackouts: Cubans brace for long summer after scorching May

If May is any indication, Cuba is in for a long, hot summer, states Havana horse and buggy driver Osmel Valdes.

The 52-year-old Havana resident runs a transportation service through the Cuban capital's sweltering streets. Shade is difficult to come by so he lays a piece of scrap cardboard atop his horse in between trips to offer it reprieve.

This month the heat has been awful, he states.

Across the island nation, summer season temperatures arrived nearly 2 months early, made worse by hours-long blackouts amidst fuel lacks and power-plant failures. With night-time temperature levels reaching 27 degrees Celsius (80 degrees Fahrenheit) and daytime temperature levels skyrocketing to 35 C, there is no escape, regional homeowners state.

Meteorologist Ramon Perez, who works for Cuba's Environment Center, states May looks to be the warmest on the Caribbean island considering that 1951, when record-keeping began here.

Cuba's environment is gradually ending up being hotter and hotter, and particularly our summertimes, Perez told .

Last summertime was the most popular on record and this one is on track for similarly sweltering temperature levels, a phenomenon the meteorologist credits to worldwide warming.

The growing frequency and strength of extreme weather condition - both on land and in oceans - is symptomatic of global, human-driven climate change that is fueling extremes, specialists say.

The El Nino weather pattern, which began to deteriorate in March, has actually also fueled above-average land and sea temperatures across the globe.

Those conditions have actually left Cuba, which lies at the rainy crossway of the Atlantic Ocean, the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea, incredibly exposed to a typhoon season forecasted to be among the worst ever.

Cuba's Climate Center states there's an 80% possibility at least one hurricane will strike the island this season.

U.S. federal government forecasters stated recently approximately seven significant typhoons may form in an remarkable 2024 Atlantic hurricane season starting June 1.

The sultry temperature levels combine in Cuba with a ravaging economic crisis.

The one-two punch has already exhausted Cubans like Nelson Jadier, a sweat-drenched 28-year-old who works for a restaurant charming customers from the sidewalk.

May has actually been rather a month for those people who need to work on the street to put food on the table, Jadier said.

(source: Reuters)