A severe heatwave gripped much of Europe on Sunday, with temperatures nearing 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit), prompting nationwide warnings, transport disruption and signs of strain on wildlife and at tourist hotspots.

The heat surge ‌on June 21, the summer solstice in the northern hemisphere and typically the start of the three hottest months of the year, raised concerns of an early and persistent onset of extreme conditions.

  • daannii@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I lived in a small city in Wales a few years back.
    Pretty much no one had AC in their house/apartment.

    A lot of other places didn’t either. Like restaurants and pubs.

    But the grocery store did. So if it got crazy hot I would sometimes wander around the tesco across the street.

    The university I was attending had AC in the newer building but I do believe it wasn’t in all buildings.

    Train had AC.
    The Bus most certainly did not. Riding the bus on a hot rainy day was like being in a sauna. Condensation running down the inside walls and windows. All fogged up windows.

    They just aren’t prepared to handle this heat.

    The windows I had in my apartment were like…they opened like a fridge door on its side. Not slide up like how it is common here in the U.S. Making it difficult to use window AC units.

    Plus the additional demand on the power grid for people getting AC for homes and apartments is probably not currently supported.

  • kinther@lemmy.world
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    12 hours ago

    It will only get worse as time goes on. The heat we are seeing now has a lag time on the order of decades. So give it another 20 years and it will only get hotter.

      • hcf@sh.itjust.works
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        10 hours ago

        From what I’ve read, not exactly.

        AMOC collapse would cause weather patterns in Europe to swing wildly between scorching hot to frigid cold, causing crop/local ecosystem collapse.

        So first you’re going to be really hungry, then–depending upon how long you make it–you’ll be bitterly cold or insufferably hot.

        🫠

  • thepig@lemmy.zip
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    14 hours ago

    I am quite concerned as a south European, the heat every summer becomes more and more unbearable, the official temperatures don’t do it justice, I have seen temperatures above 52° celsius on my car thermometer parked in the shade. We have no protection against this extreme heat, on the cold you can dress warmer, but with the heat there is nothing we can do if you have to work in the street. Migraines all the time, heat rashes all the time, food spoils all the time, wildfires all the time. A constant nightmare

    • SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      5 hours ago

      Yeah, my house was built for extreme heat in the traditional Spanish way - it has every trick available to stay cool without needing electricity.

      During heatwaves these days, however, it gets heatsoaked and becomes too hot inside. So, we’ve gotta put in a heat exchanger :-/

        • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          4 hours ago

          Being buried underground helps. Like unironically, as heat and cold waves continue to get worse, we may see people shifting towards underground homes. They’re already fairly common in parts of America (mostly in tornado alley where being buried helps protect against having the entire house being ripped off the foundation and thrown across town) and they are extremely energy efficient.

          Your walls basically use geothermal to transfer heat directly into the earth. Like how being buried in sand at the beach will keep you nice and cool even when the beach is hot. Especially if you’re buried below the frost line, which makes winters easy too. So it’s not like it’s a new building technique that would need to be invented. It’s just that we’ll probably see more of it in places that didn’t traditionally have them.

        • SharkWeek@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          4 hours ago

          Sooo …

          A light coloured Roman tile outer roof, supported by vented bricks that allow airflow, above a vented attic space, above a concrete ceiling also lined with vented bricks (essentially a second roof).

          Then it has external shutters, shades (again with a top of Roman tiles) that stick out enough that sunlight doesn’t hit the windows directly through the hottest part of the day.

          The walls are thick, double-skinned with an air-gap, and painted white on the outside.

          Inside, all foors are tiled over concrete so they act as a heatsink, too. Plus it’s built partly into the mountain side.

          Since moving in we’ve added some ceiling insulation, double glazing, and redone the chimney so that it’s well sealed and doesn’t allow warm air in. Next up is heat exchangers, probably one on each end of the house.

    • CapuccinoCoretto@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      The secret is that the temperature underground is much cooler than surface temperatures. To take advantage of this, you dig a hole about 6 feet down, lie down flat, then pull the dirt back over yourself and fill the hole or have someone else do it for you.

    • HumanOnEarth@lemmy.ca
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      14 hours ago

      There’s this sort of little known concept known as “climate change”, it was known as “global warming” a long time ago. The idea is that as we releaae greenhouse gases like CO2 into the atmosphere, more of the sun’s energy gets trapped inside the atmosphere making it warmer.

      As it gets warmer, stuff like this is expected to become more common. We haven’t known about this for very long, and so our greenhouse gas emissions continue to speed up day by day, but if we can spread the word about this new and very important phonomenon, we might be able to avoid the worst of it in the long run.

      Or maybe it will all just go away and get better one day if we just do nothing and wait and see. I don’t think we know enough about this “climate change” thing yet to really make any drastic changes. I mean what if we’re wrong?

      • TBi@lemmy.world
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        12 hours ago

        Hey if that was real scientists would have warned us about it years ago. But not your woke mind virus scientists. Real ones!

        /s

      • Tujio@lemmy.world
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        14 hours ago

        Good thing climate change is a liberal hoax. Otherwise I’d be worried, right?

      • doben@lemmy.ml
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        13 hours ago

        There‘s even cultish alarmists that call it „climate catastrophe“ by now. Weirdos.

        And then there‘s even people saying it‘s all because we do economics wrong, or something. Lol!

    • amniotic druid@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      Didn’t you guys like enslave the entire equatorial world 200 years ago? I didn’t know they had heat pumps on the ships

  • pasdechance@jlai.lu
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    12 hours ago

    Managed to keep my indoor temp under 30 today here in Normandy. No AC. Not looking forward to the next few days.

    • arrow74@lemmy.zip
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      7 hours ago

      My german apartment is managing, but these thick walls are getting warmer day by day. I’m afraid it’s going to become an oven before long

  • TrackinDaKraken@lemmy.world
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    13 hours ago

    40C is just June through August where I live.

    I have a window AC, but most summers I don’t bother installing it. I did order a ceiling fan for my bedroom, though. Should be here tomorrow.

    You’ve heard, “but it’s a dry heat”? Yeah, that makes a huge difference. It’s currently 9% humidity and dropping here.

      • PagPag@lemmy.world
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        4 hours ago

        24C?

        Lol, best of luck to you in the future unless you’re planning to be around the poles.

        • Shellofbiomatter@lemmus.org
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          55 minutes ago

          That’s not actually outside of the realms of possibility. Id just have to move to the northern part of my neighboring county and I’d be close to polar circle.

      • assaultpotato@sh.itjust.works
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        11 hours ago

        24C? Man I’m in one of the coldest cities on the planet. I get heat stroke immediately any time I approach past 30°N. Even I don’t feel hot until around 28C or so.

        My fiancee is Turkish and she gets cold at 16 though so I guess you must somehow be further north than I am.

        • Shellofbiomatter@lemmus.org
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          49 minutes ago

          Not really, actually even more to the South, 59,4N.
          Cant help it. My heat tolerance is abysmally bad. 24c is the last comfortable limit if I’m not active. Every point above that gets worse and by 25c I’m completely coverd in sweat constantly and performance drops, even sleep gets disrupted.

    • frongt@lemmy.zip
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      12 hours ago

      Good luck. The glaciers are melting faster than ever, and that’s their primary source of fresh water. And nearly all the food, and really all the other goods too, are imported.