When the government in Iran ordered the nation to shut down for two days starting on Wednesday to conserve energy and protect public health because of “unprecedented” broiling summer heat, Iranians and experts alike quickly discerned another, unspoken reason for the enforced holiday.
Iran simply does not have enough natural gas, or a strong enough power grid, to keep all the lights on despite sitting on the second-largest reserves of natural gas in the world.
And, as skeptical residents pointed out, much of Iran experiences blistering heat every year, especially in the south, which has already endured debilitating temperatures this summer.
“I don’t feel any temperature difference at all,” said a 42-year-old bookstore worker named Nima in Tehran, the capital.
“This is not unprecedented at all.”
Persons:
”, Nima
Locations:
Iran, Tehran, “