By Ellalyn De Vera-Ruiz
Despite the official start of rainy season in the country, Metro Manila continues to swelter in extreme heat with mercury rising to 36.6 degrees Celsius on Tuesday afternoon.
(JANSEN ROMERO / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) recorded the 36.6 degrees Celsius air temperature at the Science Garden monitoring station in Quezon City around 2:50 p.m. Tuesday, which is the highest so far this year.
Last April 21, Metro Manila’s air temperature also soared to 36.6 degrees Celsius.
The warm weather condition is attributed to a monsoon break, which has left most of Luzon and Visayas cloudless and rainless. This weather scenario may persist in the coming days, apart from isolated rain showers or thunderstorms in the later afternoon or early evening.
PAGASA considers the Science Garden monitoring station in Quezon City as the “most ideal” place to get the highest air temperature in the metropolis because of the absence of “obstructions,” unlike at the NAIA and Port Area stations where “smoke, urban heat, buildings, and airplanes” affect the air temperature.
Based on the PAGASA data, the highest temperature in Philippine history is 42.2 degrees Celsius, recorded in Tuguegarao, Cagayan on May 11, 1969.
Meanwhile, the hottest day in Metro Manila was 38.5 degrees Celsius recorded on May 14, 1987.
(JANSEN ROMERO / MANILA BULLETIN FILE PHOTO)
The Philippine Atmospheric, Geophysical and Astronomical Services Administration (PAGASA) recorded the 36.6 degrees Celsius air temperature at the Science Garden monitoring station in Quezon City around 2:50 p.m. Tuesday, which is the highest so far this year.
Last April 21, Metro Manila’s air temperature also soared to 36.6 degrees Celsius.
The warm weather condition is attributed to a monsoon break, which has left most of Luzon and Visayas cloudless and rainless. This weather scenario may persist in the coming days, apart from isolated rain showers or thunderstorms in the later afternoon or early evening.
PAGASA considers the Science Garden monitoring station in Quezon City as the “most ideal” place to get the highest air temperature in the metropolis because of the absence of “obstructions,” unlike at the NAIA and Port Area stations where “smoke, urban heat, buildings, and airplanes” affect the air temperature.
Based on the PAGASA data, the highest temperature in Philippine history is 42.2 degrees Celsius, recorded in Tuguegarao, Cagayan on May 11, 1969.
Meanwhile, the hottest day in Metro Manila was 38.5 degrees Celsius recorded on May 14, 1987.