Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news information from worldwide businesses.

    What's Hot

    Asian AI startups launch Mythos-like models as Anthropic’s export ban drags on

    June 27, 2026

    ‘Jewar solar plant to boost India’s export power; generate thousands of jobs’: CM Yogi Adityanath

    June 27, 2026

    SpaceX’s new $11 billion ‘saving grace’ comes with a big catch

    June 27, 2026
    Facebook Instagram YouTube LinkedIn X (Twitter)
    Trending
    • Asian AI startups launch Mythos-like models as Anthropic’s export ban drags on
    • ‘Jewar solar plant to boost India’s export power; generate thousands of jobs’: CM Yogi Adityanath
    • SpaceX’s new $11 billion ‘saving grace’ comes with a big catch
    • India’s higher nominal GDP growth may help contain fiscal pressures despite global risks: EY
    • Trump threatens 100% tariff on European countries that impose digital tax | Donald Trump
    • ‘You will get trapped’: Digvijaya Singh says MP CM Mohan Yadav keeping 12 portfolios is ‘big mistake’ | India News
    • Pearadise founder accused of manipulation, unwanted sexual conduct
    • PGDM vs Executive MBA: Which management programme is right for you? | Education News
    Newspublicly
    • About Us
    • Advertise & Partner with us
    • Pitch Your Story
    • Contact Us
    Facebook Instagram LinkedIn X (Twitter)
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • World News
      • Asia
      • India
      • USA
      • UK & Europe
      • Middle East
    • Economy & Business
      • Global Economy
      • Corporate & Industry
      • Finance & Markets
      • Policy & Trade
    • Technology
      • Gadgets & Devices
      • Software & Apps
      • AI & Machine Learning
      • Robotics & Automation
    • Health & Medicine
      • Fitness & Nutrition
      • Research & Innovation
      • Disease & Treatment
      • Doctors, Clinics & Patient Care
    • Travel & Tourism
    • Automobile
      • Electric & Hybrid Vehicles
      • Auto Industry Insights
    • Sports
    • More
      • Education
      • Real Estate
      • Environment & Climate
      • Space & Astronomy
      • War & Conflicts
    Newspublicly
    Home»World News»UK & Europe»‘A sad inevitability’: after decades of climate warnings, why is Europe so unprepared for rising heat? | Extreme heat
    UK & Europe

    ‘A sad inevitability’: after decades of climate warnings, why is Europe so unprepared for rising heat? | Extreme heat

    AdminBy AdminJune 27, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read0 Views
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Copy Link WhatsApp


    On Wednesday, Pierre Masselot received a text from his daughter’s nursery – less than 50 miles from the weather station that was the first this week to break the UK June temperature record – asking parents to collect children early because the school buildings were getting unbearably hot.

    Similar scenes were repeated across Europe this week as the continent swelters through its most severe and widespread heatwave on record – an oppressive force made hotter by carbon pollution and less bearable by repeated failures to prepare for it. France experienced its hottest day and night on record, while the UK and Switzerland both broke their heat records for a June day.

    For Masselot, an environmental epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, who has become one of Europe’s leading detectives tallying the hidden death toll from heatwaves, the past few days are reminiscent of the terrible summer heat that swept Europe in 2003. While he was too young then to fear for his health, he was old enough to grasp the horrors it held.

    Then, the teenager from southern France was bouncing basketballs in the sun at summer camp as brutal August heat turned towns and cities across Europe into ovens. Hot days stressed bodies and warm nights ruined rest. Older people, particularly women and those who lived alone, made up the bulk of the 70,000 victims who died from that summer’s extreme heat.

    Now, the exceptions of the past have become the norms of today – and the exceptions of today will soon be the norms of tomorrow. By the time Masselot’s toddler is 14, the same age he was in 2003, global heating will have blown well past the 1.5C (2.7F) target that world leaders promised to keep temperature rises to by the end of the century, and punishing extremes will have hit uncharted heights.

    Trying to keep cool in Copenhagen, Denmark. Photograph: Mads Claus Rasmussen/EPA

    “Climate scientists have been saying for a long time we’ll have a lot more 2003s,” said Masselot, now 37. “Now it’s become painfully obvious this is the case.”

    above average heat map

    Yet despite repeated warnings and rising awareness, heatwaves still bring large parts of the continent to its knees. Several hospitals in England have declared critical incidents as a result of extreme heat, with cooling units breaking down and critical IT systems stalling, while schools, workplaces and railways have been thrown into chaos and wildfires have broken out. In France, where half of all homes have poor protection from high heat, more than 55 people have drowned while trying to cool down, four young children have died inside hot cars and two nuclear reactors have been forced to close for lack of cooling water.

    double quotation mark

    Simply put, we remain on a one-way trip towards a more dangerous future, and it’s time we hit the brakes

    Friederike Otto

    Has Europe failed to learn from its past? The devastation of summer 2003 triggered the first serious attempts to deal with heat, as governments linked early warning systems to rapid response measures for when temperatures rose, such as limiting travel, closing schools and cancelling non-urgent appointments in hospitals. Research has found such adaptations have proved successful, with mortality rates now far less sensitive to shifts in temperature. If the 2003 heatwave were to strike today with the same strength, a study found in November, the projected death toll would be 75% lower.

    But at the same time, heatwaves are growing hotter, longer and more common – and it is entirely unclear if efforts to adapt will keep up with the rising concentrations of planet-heating pollution in the atmosphere. This year, early warning systems kicked into action before the summer had even begun, as shock May heat swept north-west Europe and shattered the UK’s historical temperature record for May by a full 2C. Two weeks later, the Europe chief of the World Health Organization (WHO), Hans Kluge, stood in Berlin to announce the update of the WHO’s guidelines for heat health action plans, 18 years after they were first released. Just two weeks have passed since then, and Berlin is facing 40C heat.

    A woman in London on Friday, as the UK recorded its highest ever June temperature. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty Images

    “The tragedy is twofold,” Kluge said of the 200,000 lives the WHO estimates Europe has lost to heat in the past four years. “First, most of these deaths were entirely preventable; and second, this is just the tip of the iceberg, with millions more people being affected physically and mentally.”

    Climate breakdown is heating Europe faster than any other continent – the result of local weather patterns and proximity to the rapidly melting Arctic – and the current heatwave is no exception to its effects. A rapid attribution study published on Friday by World Weather Attribution (WWA) found it would have been “virtually impossible” at this time of year just 50 years ago.

    skip past newsletter promotion


    Sign up to Down to Earth

    The planet’s most important stories. Get all the week’s environment news – the good, the bad and the essential

    after newsletter promotion

    Graph showing Europe is fastest-warming continent

    Particularly troubling for human health are the sweltering overnight temperatures reached this week, which the scientists found were about 100 times more likely than in 2003, while the daytime peaks have grown about 10 times more likely. They ruled out any influence from El Niño, the natural warming weather pattern that recently formed in the Pacific. It will peak in strength toward the end of the year and is likely to make 2027 the hottest on record globally.

    For scientists who have long warned that heatwaves are getting worse as carbon pollution rises, the failure to follow expert advice has become tiring. “There’s a sad inevitability to all of this, with scientists like me trotting out the same quotes year after year,” said Friederike Otto, a climate scientist at Imperial College London and co-author of the WWA study, speaking before this week’s records had been broken. “Yes it’s climate change, yes it’s us, no it’s not El Niño. Simply put, we remain on a one-way trip towards a more dangerous future, and it’s time we hit the brakes.”

    What can be done? Heat and health experts have called for more shading to keep heat out of homes, better ventilation to cool them down as they warm, and more green space in cities to counter the urban heat island effect. Hospitals need more support and citizens should check on neighbours who are old or vulnerable due to illness. Some experts are wary of mass adoption of air conditioning, which heightens the risk of blackouts and worsens the urban heat island effect, but still want it in care homes, hospitals, schools and public transport. The latest WHO guidance recommends nuanced adoption, arguing it is “not a sustainable societal solution” but “remains crucial” for those at increased risk of high temperatures.

    The WHO’s position is one that has been loudly rejected by the US far right, which has turned European aversion to mass air conditioning into a meme of a poor and overregulated continent. In a post on X boosted by Elon Musk, the world’s richest man and owner of the platform, a US tech chief executive shared a screenshot of text generated by a chatbot that said “Europeans should just install air-conditioning” and “the American approach to summer was correct all along”. The post has been viewed 19.5m times.

    An air conditioning hose hangs out of a window in Utrecht, the Netherlands. Photograph: ANP/Shutterstock

    Similar sentiments have been shared by European far-right parties that have fought efforts to expand clean energy or make homes more energy efficient. Just under a year ago, Marine Le Pen, the leader of the French far right, called for a “grand plan” for air conditioning in the same week her party tried to block new wind and solar projects. The latest bout of heat has caused the debate to erupt in France once again, several months before presidential elections.

    Yet urgent calls to cut emissions continue to be brushed off as centrist governments across Europe weaken climate policy and roll back green rules in the name of competitiveness. The UN secretary general, António Guterres, who warned that London was “cooking” at the start of the week, repeated his longstanding pleas at London Climate Action Week on Tuesday to stop burning fossil fuels. The next day, the organisers of a related panel on extreme heat governance cancelled it because it was too hot. The day after, the US president, Donald Trump, advised the UK’s likely next prime minister, Andy Burnham, to “open up the North Sea” for oil and gas drilling, despite experts saying it is a mature basin with at least 90% of accessible fossil fuels already used.

    For Masselot, whose typical summer as a child involved sitting inside with all the shutters closed – “basically you live in a cave from 10am to 6pm” – there has at least been some progress in awareness of heat and how best to cope with it. “People have learned lessons and now we know the consequences it can have,” he said. “But sometimes it feels as soon as the summer has ended, we forget about it.”



    Source link

    Author

    • Admin

      NewsPublicly.com is News & Articles Platform that creating SEO-focused articles on travel, lifestyle, and digital trends.

    Admin
    • Website

    NewsPublicly.com is News & Articles Platform that creating SEO-focused articles on travel, lifestyle, and digital trends.

    Related Posts

    Trump threatens 100% tariff on European countries that impose digital tax | Donald Trump

    June 27, 2026

    Profound lessons from dog training, the story of the Brexit campaign and France’s struggle with heat-trap homes | Brexit

    June 27, 2026

    Germany braced for temperatures ‘well over 40C’ as Europe heatwave pushes east – live | Europe

    June 27, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Demo
    Top Posts

    The Blue Moon rises on May 30— Where and when to see the second full moon of the month

    May 30, 202640 Views

    New SOCOM rifle allows barrel swapping and cartridge changes

    June 1, 202633 Views

    “Inside Gemini Robotics 1.5: How Robots Learn to Reason & Act

    November 22, 202525 Views

    525 pounds of cocaine seized after Nebraska K9 alerts troopers on I-80

    May 28, 202624 Views
    Don't Miss

    Asian AI startups launch Mythos-like models as Anthropic’s export ban drags on

    June 27, 20264 Mins Read0 Views

    On Wednesday, Chinese cybersecurity firm 360 reportedly unveiled Tulongfeng, an AI tool it says can…

    ‘Jewar solar plant to boost India’s export power; generate thousands of jobs’: CM Yogi Adityanath

    June 27, 2026

    SpaceX’s new $11 billion ‘saving grace’ comes with a big catch

    June 27, 2026

    India’s higher nominal GDP growth may help contain fiscal pressures despite global risks: EY

    June 27, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • LinkedIn
    • WhatsApp

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Demo
    NEWSPUBLICLY
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn

    Home

    • About Us
    • Leadership
    • Advertise & Partner With Us
    • Pitch Your Story
    • Media Kit & Pricing
    • Career
    • FAQs

    Guidelines

    • Editorial & Submission
    • Partnership
    • Advertising & Sponsor
    • Intellectual Property Policy
    • Community & Comment
    • Security & Data Protection
    • Send Your Opinion

    Quick Links

    • Cookie Policy
    • Payment & Billing Terms
    • Refund & Cancellation
    • Copyright Policy
    • Complaint & Support
    • Sitemap
    • Contact Us

    Subscribe Us

    Get the latest news and updates!

    Copyright © 2026 Newspublicly (DIGITALIX COMMUNICATION). All Rights Reserved.
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Use
    • Disclaimer