Guide · Events

WBGT for Outdoor Event Organizers

From Carnival to a road race, outdoor events put large crowds, many unacclimatized, into full sun for hours. WBGT drives the plan: go/no-go timing, how much water, shade, and medical support to stage, and when to shorten or shift the schedule.

Last updated July 9, 2026 · Live data refreshes every 15 min

An outdoor event concentrates every heat risk factor at once: dense crowds, sun exposure, physical exertion, and visitors whose bodies haven't adjusted to the tropics. The organizers who plan around WBGT, not just the temperature, are the ones who keep a great day from turning into a medical incident.

Plan the schedule around the forecast

Solar load peaks near midday, so the WBGT band swings across the day. Whenever the format allows, put the most strenuous elements, the race, the parade route, the field competition, in the cooler morning or late-afternoon windows, and leave midday for lower-intensity, shaded activity.

Scale resources to the band

The organizer's heat checklist

USVI note. Many island venues catch the trade winds, which buys real margin, but enclosed streets, courtyards, and calm days do not. Check the actual site, not the island average.

Sources

  1. OSHA / NIOSH. Heat exposure guidance. osha.gov/heat-exposure
  2. CDC. Extreme heat, mass gatherings and events.
  3. U.S. NWS. WBGT. weather.gov/ict/WBGT

Frequently asked questions

How do event organizers use WBGT?
For go/no-go and timing decisions, and to scale water, shade, and medical resources. Check the WBGT forecast for the venue, schedule the most strenuous activity for the coolest windows, and staff cooling and medical support to match the expected band.
What heat resources does an outdoor event need?
Free drinking water in quantity, shaded rest areas, a cooling station with ice and shade, clear signage, and trained medical or first-aid staff who can recognize and treat heat illness. In higher bands, add misting or cooling and consider shortening or shifting the schedule.
Should an event be cancelled for heat?
Rarely outright, but timing and format often need to change. In the high and extreme bands, postpone or shorten strenuous portions (races, parades, sports), expand shade and water, and be ready to pause. The safety of participants and crowds comes before the schedule.