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'No power for hours': What it's like living in one of the world's hottest towns with 48C days

A woman cools herself off with an ice pack during a heat wave in Banda, northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Sunday, June 21, 2026.
A woman cools herself off with an ice pack during a heat wave in Banda, northern Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, Sunday, June 21, 2026. Copyright  Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
Copyright Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
By Liam Gilliver
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Residents in of Earth's hottest spots share how extreme temperatures, fuelled by the burning of fossil fuels, is making daily life a gruelling challenge.

Sweltering temperatures have swept across much of the world, including Europe, as scientists warn that June's back-to-back heatwaves would have been "virtually impossible" without climate change.

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June 2026 was the hottest ever recorded in Western Europe and the second-warmest globally at 1.39°C above the estimated pre-industrial average, according to the EU's Copernicus Climate Change Service.

While Europe's blistering temperatures have been well documented in the media, little attention has been given to country's experiencing even higher levels of extreme heat.

The hottest town in the world

In May, temperatures in the North Indian town of Banda hit a blistering 48.2°C, one of multiple times this year that the town recorded the country's highest temperature.

In fact, Banda was categorised at the hottest spot on Earth seven times this year, according to climatologist and weather historian Maximiliano Herrera, who tracks global weather extremes.

Since then, temperatures have dropped some but are still stifling, particularly as seasonal rains increase humidity.

How extreme heat is impacting market workers

A labourer carries vegetables at a market in the early morning during a heat wave in Banda.
A labourer carries vegetables at a market in the early morning during a heat wave in Banda. Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Munni Devi and her four sons begin work loading and unloading vegetables when most of the town is asleep. It’s only 4 am, but the temperature is already 30C.

Workers at Banda’s vegetable market are busy unloading tomatoes, jackfruits and other vegetables and transferring them to smaller vehicles for delivery to neighbourhood shops.

Devi, 70, says the heat is becoming more intense every year, and this year has been especially bad. The work is physically demanding in any weather. During a heat wave, it can be brutal. But Devi says she and her sons can’t afford to miss a day.

Everyone feels the heat, but because of our circumstances, we have to bear it.
Munni Devi
Market worker in Banda

At the market, young men wheel carts through narrow lanes. Women sort vegetables on the streets. Devi says many buyers arrive early, hoping to finish shopping before temperatures soar.

Devi and her sons work from early morning until lunch, then return home to recuperate. She says unreliable power to her home means there is little respite even there. Devi’s grandchildren get sprayed down every day with a water hose to get some relief.

“If there is no power, even the ceiling fans don’t work. Sometimes there is no power for hours,” she says.

Protecting nature from scorching temperatures

Bird conservationist Shobharam Kashyap holds wooden birdhouses he makes for sparrows during a heat wave in Banda.
Bird conservationist Shobharam Kashyap holds wooden birdhouses he makes for sparrows during a heat wave in Banda. Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

As the afternoon sun bakes Banda’s streets, residents who can afford to stay inside do so. But some vegetable sellers and auto rickshaw drivers stay outdoors in hopes of attracting a little more business.

Meanwhile, 70-year-old animal lover Shobharam Kashyap is busy making wooden birdhouses at a workshop in his home. Kashyap says he and other volunteers have installed over 15,000 birdhouses across the town to give birds respite from an increasingly harsh environment.

Kashyap’s brightly painted birdhouses — many of which are painted green as he says birds seem to prefer that colour — have been mounted on trees and walls across Banda. He has also placed clay water bowls in and near his home to give birds a place for a dip or drink.

Kashyap says he is continuing traditional practices of caring for other animals.

“Our culture has long encouraged feeding birds," he tells news agency AP. "Women visiting temples traditionally offer rice. Neither the priest nor the deity consumes it — the birds do."

Banda's inundated hospitals

Dr. Abhishek Pranayami examines a patient suffering from a heat-related illness amid high temperatures at a district government hospital in Banda.
Dr. Abhishek Pranayami examines a patient suffering from a heat-related illness amid high temperatures at a district government hospital in Banda. Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Hotter days have brought more patients to the hospital in Banda, one of the bigger medical centres in this region. Those with heat maladies, ranging from fainting to heatstroke, tend to come in the afternoon and evening, filling the corridors and wards.

Patients sit shoulder-to-shoulder on benches. Relatives fan family members with sheets of paper. Hospital staff move between beds carrying intravenous fluids.

Dr Abhishek Pranayami, the hospital’s head doctor, says the hospital sees a surge of patients every summer “and the number of patients is increasing every year".

He says they are treating large numbers of people suffering from dehydration, diarrhea, vomiting and abdominal pain. These illnesses become more common as temperatures rise. Some patients recover within days. Others take longer.

“Pressure is quite high on us and the staff,” he says.

Sleeping outdoors to escape the heat

Children gather around a mobile phone as local residents rest at a railway station to escape the heat in Banda, northern Indian state of Utter Pradesh, Saturday, June 20, 2026
Children gather around a mobile phone as local residents rest at a railway station to escape the heat in Banda, northern Indian state of Utter Pradesh, Saturday, June 20, 2026 Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

Even after sunset, Banda remains hot. When young boys play a game of cricket, they keep their water bottles cool by wrapping them in torn clothes.

At the town’s railway station, families sometimes gather late into the night, hoping the open platforms and occasional breeze will be more comfortable than cramped homes that have absorbed heat all day.

On one such night, dozens are sleeping in the station to avoid the heat. In one spot, several children and adults sleep on blankets spread out on the stone platform with parked train cars a few feet away. Some use bags as pillows. A pile of flip-flops sits inches from their bare feet. Another man stretches out on a bench, with his head on a backpack.

Nearby, several men and women are trying to sleep on blankets near the ticket kiosks, despite the bright lights. Dogs lie between some of the people on the ground, also trying to get relief.

Laborers whose homes are too small and hot to sleep in are sleeping on blankets outside the railway station’s entrance, trying their best to get some rest in the hot night.

Regardless of the noise of vehicles and passengers entering and leaving the station, labourers and residents are lying on towels and sometimes right on the gravel as the relatively open, breezy roads and pavements near the railway station give them the best chance for some shut-eye.

For parents with little children, the hot night is too uncomfortable for sleep, so they wait in the station, huddled around a smartphone.

'Climate change is shifting the average'

The struggle for relief and rest has become a defining feature of summer in cities like Banda.

Climate change is shifting the average,” says Abhiyant Tiwari, climate and health expert at New Delhi-based NRDC India.

“While Banda has always been known for hot summers, what is changing right now is the intensity, the duration and the number of people exposed to dangerous heat conditions.”

High nighttime temperatures are especially worrying because they prevent people from recovering physically from the day’s heat, he says.

The top government official in Banda says authorities have responded by opening cooling centres, distributing hundreds of thousands of oral rehydration kits and monitoring hospitals during heat warnings.

Amit Aasery, the district magistrate of Banda, says officials are studying groundwater levels, soil moisture and vegetation loss while working to improve water supplies and public awareness. But he says there is only so much they can do.

“What is happening here is a global phenomenon,” he says. “It is because of climate change. We are the recipient of this.”

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