An intense, fatal heat wave swept through the United States in July. More than 100 million people were put on heat alerts, and over 85% of the country had temperatures at or above . A man died in
Dallas County, Texas, and a heat emergency was triggered in Washington DC due to temperatures over , on the weekend of July 23–24. This extreme heat severely intensifies drought conditions.
Arkansas and
Missouri went from 1% and 2% of their states from seeing severe drought or worse, to a quarter and a third. On July 17,
Winnipeg saw their highest ever
dew point, at . Temperatures in
Abilene, Texas on July 20 hit , breaking a daily record.
Austin, Texas also saw a daily high record of . Daily record high low temperature records were set, like in
Needles, California, where the temperature never dipped below on July 20. Record warm low temperatures were also set in
Galveston (),
Wichita Falls (),
Houston () and
Laredo (), on July 20. The heat wave was responsible for 18 other deaths, including 12 in
Maricopa County, Arizona and one at
Badlands National Park.
Witchita Falls hit on July 20, a record for July, while on that day
Oklahoma also reached that mark.
Oklahoma City set a monthly record high of . Further east, every day from July 20 to 24 in
Newark, New Jersey got at or over , the longest streak on record.
Boston also set a record high on July 24, at . When the heat wave broke on July 25, multiple
flash flood warnings were issued with the cold front. While most parts of New Jersey exceeded for the 8th day, New York City was kept to , thus keeping the heat wave to 6 days there. Also, in New York City, for only the second time, the entire month had highs above . Overall, July 2022 was the 3rd warmest July on record, 8th for daily maximum but had the warmest daily minimums at record, at .
Texas saw their warmest July on record, with an average high temperature of . Later on in the month, another heat wave in
Portland, Oregon causes 14 additional deaths. Portland saw 7 consecutive days at or above , while
Seattle saw six days at or above , both breaking records for duration, by July 31. == August ==