In some parts of Mali, the cost of ice cubes has surpassed that of milk and bread due to record heat.
“I’ve come to buy ice because it’s very hot now,” says 15-year-old Fatouma Yattara as she visits her local vendor in the capital, Bamako.
Amidst extended power outages rendering her fridge useless, she turns to ice cubes as a makeshift solution to preserve food and beat the scorching heat of a heatwave, where temperatures have skyrocketed to 48°C.
It works to an extent, but price hikes are making life even harder. “In some places it’s 100 francs CFA ($0.20; £0.16)” for a small bag, she says, “even 300, 500 – it’s too expensive.”
As a result, ice becomes pricier than bread, with a typical baguette typically priced at around 250 CFA.
For Nana Konaté Traoré, the situation is even more challenging, as she now finds herself compelled to cook daily instead of the previous routine of a few times per week.
“We often go a whole day without power,” she says, “so, the food goes bad, and you have to throw it away”.
The problems began almost a year ago, with Mali’s state power company failing to match growing demand after accumulating hundreds of millions of dollars in debt in recent years. Many Malians do not have back-up generators as it is expensive to refuel them.
No electricity means no fans at night, forcing many to sleep outside. And it is affecting people’s health.
“We really suffer,” says Soumaïla Maïga, a young man from the Yirimadio district on the outskirts of Bamako.
“At night it can reach 46C – it’s unbearable because I suffer from dizziness. I have to pour water on myself to cope.”
Since March, temperatures have soared above 48C in parts of Mali, killing more than 100 people. Most vulnerable are the elderly and the very young.
“We were seeing about 15 hospitalisations a day,” says Prof Yacouba Toloba, who works at the university hospital in Bamako.
“Many patients are dehydrated – the main symptoms are coughs and bronchial congestion. Some also have respiratory distress,” he tells the BBC.
Schools in some areas have closed as a precaution, and people in the Muslim-majority nation were advised not to fast during the Ramadan period which ended recently.
“We need to plan more for these situations, which will perhaps come back. This time it took us by surprise,” adds Prof Toloba.
The deadly heatwave is also affecting neighbouring countries such as Senegal, Guinea, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Niger and Chad.
Human-induced climate change is to blame for these extreme highs, according to scientists at World Weather Attribution (WWA).
“Extreme 5-day maximum heat as rare as the observed event over Mali/Burkina Faso would have been 1.5C cooler and 1.4C cooler over the larger Sahel region if humans had not warmed the planet by burning fossil fuels,” their latest report says.
With temperatures expected to remain above 40C in Bamako over the next few weeks, people are trying to adapt to their new normal.
As sun sets in the capital, Ms Konaté Traoré takes several large mats outside to her yard and lays them down.
“We have to be outside all the time because of the heat. When it’s hot I get sick,” she says.
“It’s not easy at all.”






