Stepping outside in Metro Manila lately feels like opening an air fryer that has been preheating since breakfast.
The heat has become impossible to ignore. Roads shimmer under the sun. Buildings radiate warmth like giant brick ovens. Even at night, the air sometimes feels like a hair dryer pointed straight at the city.
When heat index levels reach 42°C to 45°C, the danger becomes serious. This is no longer ordinary summer weather. This is the kind of heat that makes the air feel borrowed from the underworld’s air conditioner.
So what causes it?
One major factor is humidity. The Philippines naturally has moist air, and humidity makes heat feel far worse. Sweat is supposed to cool the body, but when the air is already packed with moisture, sweat evaporates more slowly. Instead of cooling down, people end up trapped inside their own body heat.
Another reason is the urban heat island effect. Cities absorb and trap heat because of concrete roads, buildings, rooftops, and vehicles. Metro Manila is filled with surfaces that soak up sunlight all day and release the heat back into the air like giant concrete batteries.
The lack of trees also plays a major role. Areas with fewer green spaces lose natural shade and cooling. A single tree-lined street can feel completely different from a block covered only in cement and parked cars baking under the sun.
Weak airflow makes the situation worse. Tall buildings can trap warm air between streets, turning some areas into giant outdoor ovens with terrible ventilation.
Climate patterns such as El Niño can intensify dry and hot conditions, while climate change continues to push temperatures higher around the world. Heat waves are becoming stronger, lasting longer, and appearing more often than before.
It is also important to understand that heat index is different from actual temperature. A day with an air temperature of 35°C can feel like 45°C once humidity takes over. The human body reacts to what it feels, not just to the number shown on a thermometer.
Extreme heat can lead to dehydration, heat exhaustion, and heat stroke. Outdoor workers, commuters, children, and older adults are especially vulnerable.
Simple precautions still matter:
• Drink plenty of water
• Avoid direct sunlight during peak afternoon hours
• Wear light and loose clothing
• Rest whenever possible
Metro Manila right now feels less like a capital city and more like toast forgotten inside a toaster. Unfortunately, this kind of extreme heat may become more common in the years ahead.
⌨ ᴛʸᵖⁱⁿᵍ ᴏᵘᵗ ᵒᶠ ᵗʰᵉ ʙˡᵘᵉ ᵈᵃʳᵉᵐ ᵐᵘˢⁱᶜ ᵇˡᵒᵍ
