Sheltering under a palm tree in Saudi Arabia's capital, a Pakistani delivery driver steals a quick break during the lunch rush when orders—and scorching temperatures—are at their peak.

Gulping a bottle of cold water as the mercury nears 50 degrees Celsius (122 degrees Fahrenheit), the motorcycle driver is acutely aware that the Gulf kingdom's harsh summer heat could be fatal.

Yet, only by pushing through and filling the daily blitz of food orders will he earn enough money to send something back home, his main reason for coming to Saudi Arabia in the first place.

"The heat is intense and the sun is deadly. I always feel tired and exhausted," the 26-year-old says, asking to be identified only as Mohammed to avoid reprisal from authorities or his employer. "But it is a good job for me and my family," adds the father of two small children who live in Pakistan.

Sprawling Saudi Arabia, already one of the world's hottest countries, faces rising threats from high temperatures attributed to climate change. Its scorching summers could become longer and hotter as the planet warms, experts warn.

The risks were on display in June when more than 1,300 people died while performing the annual Muslim hajj pilgrimage to Mecca, according to an official tally—most of them unauthorized pilgrims exposed to long periods outdoors.

To protect laborers, Saudi Arabia bans work under direct sunlight and in open-air areas between noon and 3:00 pm from mid-June until mid-September as part of a longstanding "midday break" policy widely adopted across the Gulf.

However, Mohammed and other drivers, many of whom use motorcycles rather than cars and so are exposed to the heat, told AFP they felt pressure to work during these busy hours to meet their targets. "The work is very hard, but I have no other choice," Mohammed says, sweating profusely under the long-sleeve rash guard that protects him from the sun.

Saudi officials did not respond to a request for comment.

For years, Saudi restaurants organized their own food deliveries, mostly using small air-conditioned cars. The meteoric rise in recent years of food delivery apps, which are especially popular in the Gulf, has boosted demand for motorcycle drivers, many of them South Asian migrants.

Mohammed arrived in Riyadh four months ago and joined a food delivery company, which provides him with a motorcycle, housing, and one hot meal a day. The young man, who speaks poor English and little Arabic, works from 9:00 am to 9:00 pm seven days a week, earning just over $666 a month, including tips. "My family is in a much better situation now," he says, adding that he was able to send back $533 after his first month on the job.

Yet while the money is alluring, the toll of extreme heat on the body can be high. "Working in Saudi Arabia's scorching midday sun poses severe health risks to delivery workers. Their bodies can overheat dangerously, leading to potentially life-threatening conditions like heat stroke," says Karim Elgendy, senior non-resident scholar at the Middle East Institute in Washington.

"The pressure to meet delivery deadlines often makes it difficult for workers to take adequate breaks, potentially nullifying protective measures" like drinking water and wearing light clothes, he adds.

Workers in Arab states face some of the highest exposure to heat stress in the world, with 83.6 percent suffering from excessive heat exposure on the job, according to a recent report from the International Labour Organization, a United Nations agency.

In Saudi Arabia, many delivery drivers seek temporary relief during breaks in air-conditioned bus stops or restaurants. To stay hydrated, Hassan, a 20-year-old Pakistani delivery driver, keeps two bottles of yogurt and a water flask in the box of his bike.

But "inaccurate locations and waiting in the sun for customers to arrive" make an already difficult job all the more arduous, he says, catching his breath outside a luxury eyewear shop in central Riyadh. There is "no time to rest," he tells AFP as he straps on a red helmet and whizzes off to collect a new order.

Shakil, a 22-year-old Bangladeshi delivery driver, also says he cannot afford a pause. "The sun is very strong, but I cannot miss work during the day," he says after delivering a lunch order at around 2:00 pm to a guest at a hotel in central Riyadh—a job that earned him a tip of $2. "I will lose a lot."