Temperatures across most of Texas are expected to peak in the triple digits this week while some areas, including Austin and San Antonio, are under 鈥" with temperatures reaching or exceeding 105 degrees Monday and Tuesday.
Around and residents are also facing triple-digit highs for Highs in and the could hit 109 and 104 degrees, respectively.
The weather 鈥 and the accompanying demand for energy 鈥 led the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, or ERCOT, to urge most of the state to conserve energy between 2 pm and 8 pm Monday, KUT . That includes increasing thermostat temperatures to at least 78 degrees and not using large appliances like washers and driers during peak times.
鈥淓RCOT continues to use all tools available to manage the grid effectively and reliably, including using reserve power and calling upon large electric customers who have volunteered to lower their energy use," the grid operator said in a news release Sunday night.
In response to the weather, the City of San Antonio is operating centers at various libraries, parks and recreation buildings, and senior centers the city鈥檚 office of emergency management announced this week.
鈥淎dults over 65, children under 4, and people with existing medical conditions such as heart disease and those without access to air conditioning are at highest risk on days with high temperatures,鈥 the advisory states.
The City of Dallas is also about 15 cooling centers throughout the city. Austin continues operating its cooling centers after opening them last weekend.
Rodrigo Mosquera, a construction worker in Austin, found a brief respite from the weather at the Ruiz Branch library Monday but said the current heatwave has made him reconsider how he earns a living.
鈥淚鈥檓 thinking of just getting to either sales or someplace where 鈥 I work inside a cool environment,鈥 Mosquera, 61, told KUT. 鈥淏ecause in this heat, physical abilities are not working too well.鈥