Use of commas for such that followed by two sentences

Consider the sentence

The sun shines such that it is warm and water evaporates.

The two parts of the sentence "it is warm" and "water evaporates" are independent sentences and a comma should be placed between them.

The sun shines such that it is warm, and water evaporates.

But this reads like

The sun shines such that it is warm. Water evaporates.

I would like to convey that both "it is warm" and "water evaporates" are a consequence of the sun shining without ending up with an extremely long sentence. What's the best way to rephrase this?


Solution 1:

There is no reason to use a comma inside the complex clause (two clauses joined by a coordinating conjunction), "it is warm and water evaporates". Still no reason when that is preceded by "such that" which creates a single dependent clause.