A city in the Middle East is becoming 'unlivable' due to soaring temperatures.

Kuwait, nestled between Iraq and the Persian Gulf, registered a temperature of 54C (129F) – the third-highest reading in the world - on July 21, 2016.

Known for it's heat, the country's gauges also breached 50C (122F) for 19 days in 2021 - a record that is expected to be smashed this year as temperatures continue to increase.

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Climate scientists now predict temperatures there will be up 5.5C (42F) by the end of the century.

Workers shelter from the sun under a tree in Kuwait City on July 30, 2023, amidst a heatwave. (Photo by YASSER AL-ZAYYAT / AFP) (Photo by YASSER AL-ZAYYAT/AFP via Getty Images)
People are forced to find shade where they can to protect themselves from the heat (file)

With the heat continuing to rise year on year, annual rainfall has been dropping in the already arid country with the frequency and intensity of dust storms increasing as a result.

The temperatures can also be a danger to life, with reports claiming that birds have dropped dead from the sky and seahorses have boiled in the bay.

Kuwait
The city has been making amends to try and stop so many heat-related death (file)

The 50C heat is also impactful to humans as prolonged exposure can result in heat exhaustion, cardiovascular problems and even death.

The city has been making amends to try and stop so many heat-related deaths.

There is now an entire indoor shopping street, lined with palm trees and European-style boutiques to protect residents and visitors from the rays of the sun.

Kuwait
50C temperatures can be a danger to life (file)

This year, for the first time, the Kuwaiti government has issued an edict allowing funerals to be conducted at night, so that they can be carried out in cooler hours.

Research published by the Institute of Physics last year claims climate change could increase the number of heat-related deaths by 5.1 per cent to 11.7 per cent across the whole population, but by up to 15 per cent for non-Kuwaitis.

People walk through a mist dispenser as they enter al-Mubarakiya market amid soaring temperatures in Kuwait City on July 23, 2023. (Photo by YASSER AL-ZAYYAT / AFP) (Photo by YASSER AL-ZAYYAT/AFP via Getty Images)
Climate scientists now predict temperatures there will be up 5.5C (42F) by the end of the century (file)

Salman Zafar from EcoMENA said that: “Kuwait could be potentially facing serious impacts of global warming in the form of floods, droughts, depletion of aquifers, inundation of coastal areas, frequent sandstorms, loss of biodiversity, significant damage to ecosystem, threat to agricultural production and outbreak of diseases.”

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