shitloadofbooks 11 hours ago

"Extreme Heat" seems to be 37-40 degrees Celsius which is bafflingly mundane to me as an Australian who grew up in rural New South Wales. We'd pack 30 kids and a teacher into an un-airconditioned classroom with just a ceiling fan and the windows open in that temperature.

I imagine the buildings there just aren't built to support that heat plus the body height of hundreds or thousands of attendees?

  • winstonp 11 hours ago

    the British are notoriously sensitive to heat. They'll call 30 Celsius weather a heat wave.

    • jorl17 11 hours ago

      I'm from Portugal and I start losing it at 25. 30 degrees is insane.

      Last summer my house got to 39, and I didn't have AC (it was broken). I think I'm still recovering.

      • ornornor 11 hours ago

        I had 40 Celsius today at around 9pm. Middle of the night now and it’s 34. It’s as cool as it’s going to get before it starts heating up again tomorrow. Where I live there are no laws on max temperature in residential housing so the owner (I’m renting) doesn’t have to do anything about it. Never mind the poorly insulated, black slate roof (I’m on the last floor) or lack of AC (I’d have to foot the bill anyway).

    • wil421 11 hours ago

      That’s normal where I live in the Southeast US from late May to late September. Plus 60-99% humidity, I can see the air in the mornings.

      There’s something about 85F/30C and 80%+ humidity that prevents the temp from going much higher for a longer period of time.

      • bavell 9 hours ago

        Yep, 9:30p here and it's 82F/80% humidity. Still pretty mild compared to the deep summer months (Jul/Aug)!

  • human305893 11 hours ago

    Euro buildings are built to keep heat in. Aus buildings are leaky tents.

    • eisa01 10 hours ago

      That should actually help you also with AC: Keep the cold in, and reduce the electricity costs

      • lazide 9 hours ago

        For some reason they seem allergic to AC - see the rest of this thread.

        • basisword 9 hours ago

          COST. People don’t have the money to spend installing aircon to save themselves from a couple of weeks of discomfort per year.

          • lazide 9 hours ago

            At the point there is a noticeable mortality spike, it’s not just a few weeks of discomfort eh?

            • basisword 9 hours ago

              Still doesn’t solve the cost factor. If you don’t have the money you don’t have the money. And if you barely have the money you’re probably going to take the risk because the risk is still very low.

          • Klayy 8 hours ago

            and regulatory hurdles in many locations, you can't really install AC in many buildings because there's nowhere to put the external unit

            • asdff 5 hours ago

              You don't need an external unit. Window AC (including casement sized) exists as well as portable AC.

              • Klayy 15 minutes ago

                Portable AC exists and people do use it, but it's loud and awkward with casement windows. This is a bandaid solution at best. Yet, I've seen them sold out in the summer, so people do use them.

          • vasachi 7 hours ago

            I don’t get it. How much do AC units cost in EU? I can buy one for, like, $200-300.

          • mr_mitm 15 minutes ago

            It's not just cost. Many people in Germany claim they get sick or experience neck pain the instant they stand under an AC. I cannot relate at all and I'm very puzzled, but at the same time I don't want to deny their experience.

    • fy20 5 hours ago

      If they are insulated properly (lots of roof insulation) it also keeps the heat out. I'm building a house and last week it reached 32c here, inside got no warmer than 23c on the upper floor. I don't have AC installed yet, just HRV.

  • weightedreply 11 hours ago

    We need a humidity comparison to go with temperature.

    I grew up in a humid city and summers were unbearable. Now I live in a dry climate and 30°C is pretty comfortable.

    • AstroNutt 9 hours ago

      Temperature Humidity Index. Or as they now call it for normies, "feels like temperature"

  • maxerickson 11 hours ago

    Humidity makes a big difference in how stressful the temperature is (wet bulb temperature accounts for this somewhat). The age of the attendees and the tendency of the building to heat would also be factors.

  • anthk 11 hours ago

    40C in the Atlantic Spain with the Foehn effect (weather for today and tomorrow) would make 30C in Australia a joke.

    The humidity here it's hell. You feel 35C like ~42C in dry climates.

    • eloisius 10 hours ago

      A lot of it is acclimatization. In Taipei this morning, at 9:30 it’s already 31C and 73% humidity, forecasted to hit 37C by noon. My first year living here this was unbearable, but now it’s tolerable. It’s just summer, not a spurious heat wave.

      • GeoAtreides 36 minutes ago

        >It’s just summer, not a spurious heat wave.

        what are you implying here

  • tzs 10 hours ago

    How does the humidity in rural New South Wales compare to London?

    • gonzo41 10 hours ago

      Depends, In northern NSW, the heat it humid, in the south / west it's usually dry. It gets hot, like opening a oven door, but it's not a wet humid heat that kills you.

  • nomilk 10 hours ago

    And that was after running around a semi-arid playground playing 'tips' or touch footy during recess and lunch!

    • contingencies 9 hours ago

      No worries as they'd had their vegemite for brekkie providing all the salt they need to offset the constant sweat. None of this soft modern electrolyte bullshit, just beer dregs on toast.

  • jcranmer 10 hours ago

    People tend to rely on air temperatures when in reality the lethality of heat is probably more linked to the wet-bulb temperature.

    The human body has a natural resting temperature of about 37°C, and metabolism of course generates more heat constantly, so we constantly have to shed that heat. When the temperature is low, we can rely purely on conducting the heat into the atmosphere to shed the heat (which is probably why internal body temperature is higher than the atmosphere!). At higher temperatures, conduction is less efficient, or sometimes even adds heat load into the system (at above 37°C, obviously), so we start relying on evaporative cooling (i.e., sweat) to cool us down.

    The wet-bulb temperature is the minimum temperature that can be reached by evaporative cooling. So when the wet-bulb temperature is in the mid-30s °C… people start to become literally unable to regulate their core body temperature, and the heat is lethal. Wet-bulb is largely a combination of the temperature and humidity, but unfortunately, it's not typically reported in most weather reports, so people go off of the air temperature (and the humidity) that is reported.

    Which is a long-winded way of saying "the humidity matters a lot for how much a given temperature is bearable." I don't know what environment you come from purely by rural New South Wales, but my first guess is the semi-arid and thus low-humidity bush regions of the state, which means the apparent wet-bulb temperature of 37-40°C would be a lot lower than the equivalent 37-40°C for most of the humid continental climates of Europe.

    • jesse_faden 7 hours ago

      Dew point is a much better measure of the oppressive, muggy, sweltering feeling than humidity. The dew point in Australia ranges in the 5ºc - 15ºc range at which 30ºc after sunset feels vastly different, way cooler than South East Asia where the dew point is constantly above 24ºc.

      • fy20 5 hours ago

        Right so in Brussels today the dew point is forecast to be 23c. Big difference.

        • qmmmur 3 hours ago

          I used to live in Berlin and the summers there were unbearably muggy. Everyone seemed okay with it and it made me feel crazy!

    • shoaloak 5 hours ago

      This for sure. I notice quite a difference with 30 degrees in rural Portugal vs the Netherlands. You sweat a lot more due to the higher humidity.

      • AlecSchueler 3 hours ago

        37 in Turkey felt like 26 in Ireland.

    • fulafel 5 hours ago

      Theory primer (from https://derangedphysiology.com/main/cicm-primary-exam/thermo...):

      > The total heat transfer of a human is the same as the metabolic heat production, and is approximately 100 watts, or 400 kJ/hr, or 60-70 kcal/hr at rest. It occurs by:

        >  Radiation (50%)
        >  Convection (30%)
        >  Evaporation (20%)
        >  Conduction (usually 0%)
      

      (Radiation and convection can either cool or heat you depending on the environment)

  • seydor 7 hours ago

    Yeah we ve reached stupid levels of weather scare. France did have some extreme temperatures over 42, but 40 is a typical Mediterranean heat wave, not Armageddon

    • butchkass 5 hours ago

      It’s litterally the hottest month of June ever registered in France, beating a 23 years old record. Very typical heat wave indeed.

      EDIT: actually yesterday was the hottest single day ever in recorded french history, and it happened in the merry month of June, not August. Truly your typical heat wave.

      EDIT2: I was wrong, the record is not actually 23 years old, but… 1 year old, as the record had already been broken in 2025. Can’t wait to get my next dose of very typical 44C temps in may next year.

  • strogonoff 6 hours ago

    Looking just at ambient air temperature is an easy mistake to make. I used to be like that, always surprised why people whine so much near the coast in winter with their comfortable numbers and thinking I’m superhuman compared to them. I stopped when I learned first-hand that their negative 17 degrees feel as bad as our negative 30.

    If you live in a town in New South Wales where the average humidity is less than 50% in the wettest (or, should I say, least dry) season, you might not understand what it feels like in London where the average doesn’t dip below 65% any time of year.

    Today London will feel at least 4 degrees Celsius hotter than Hong Kong. The latter is already an extremely unpleasant place to be in these conditions (and had in fact its own very hot weather warning issued), and unlike London it has a very strong culture of air conditioning.

    4 degrees might seem like not a lot, but heat extremes are a tricky beast. Once your body cannot evaporate heat fast enough, you’re literally toast.

  • kuerbel 6 hours ago

    I guess it's different if you are used to it. 40 degrees is absolutely not normal here. Even 35 is very unusual.

tim333 1 hour ago

Sitting here in central London on the day of the conference it seems a bit wimpy to me. Max today is 34C which is hot but not life threatening. Some trains may be delayed but they do that all the time. I assume the LSE library is aircon. Most such buildings are these days.

You'd think a bit of heat would be a bonus given the topic.

delichon 12 hours ago

> Hosted in collaboration with the Zurich Climate Resilience Alliance.

Their climate resilience seems low.

> The event will finish with a fire side chat

Is this a prank?

  • bluefirebrand 10 hours ago

    A fire side chat does not mean there will be an actual fire

    It's corpo speak for "a more casual discussion"

  • pkaye 9 hours ago

    Maybe an "ice cream social" would be better.

PeterStuer 5 hours ago

The dowside of hosting your conference in exquisitly beautifull old locations is that they have no airco.

While well managed traditional cooling management can keep them pleasant enough, this would require light programme adaptations, basically shifting to starting early morning - noon, covering the glass dome, and night ventilation, but that seems to be more insurmountable than cancelling.

Apparently the LSE does have airco spaces, but these aren't as inspirationally nice it seems.

lwansbrough 11 hours ago

Europeans don’t get scolded enough for their resistance to air conditioning. In terms of accounting for preventable deaths, Greece has 2x more heat-related deaths per capita annually than Mississippi has gun deaths.

By comparison, the worst US state for heat related deaths, Nevada - a literal desert - has >10x fewer deaths per capita than Greece.

  • PaulKeeble 11 hours ago

    I completely agree. Historically AC has not been necessary for the one to two days a year it was needed, but that world is gone now and the situation has changed and the widespread adoption of AC is now necessary.

    Its going to be a huge challenge because the buildings are not designed with that in mind, many buildings are hundreds of years old making these sorts of renovations notoriously difficult and expensive, but it has to start because climate change is only going to get worse and worse.

    • jatora 10 hours ago

      So you are saying temperature has risen enough to warrant an AC now? Due to climate change? I thought climate change was on aggregate ~1C difference but my data is a decade old the last time i looked into it

      • colechristensen 10 hours ago

        The average temperature across the entire globe averaged over a year does not mean that each day is subject to the exact average added to it.

        Global warming intensifies differences in weather patterns. Hotter hots, colder colds, more intense storms, etc.

        • fc417fc802 9 hours ago

          Seeing as it's so commonly misunderstood I wonder if "catastrophic climate variance" wouldn't have been a better term in hindsight.

          • miki123211 8 hours ago

            People don't know what variance is.

            Most people have an intuitive understanding of what an average is, but "distance from the average" is mystifying to them.

            • colechristensen 8 hours ago

              And if you're trying to sell the public on the numbers of what's concerning, those numbers should be able to communicate the changes they expect.

              "This number is small but it means BAD THINGS" isn't a very good message

            • fc417fc802 7 hours ago

              Ok fine I hear you, in that case how about catastrophic climate chaos? It's even alliterative.

          • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

            I'm not sure a more complicated term would prevent people who don't want to understand the issue from finding new ways to not understand it.

      • adrianN 7 hours ago

        The relevant data is number of days per year with temperature above X degrees. That number has risen quite a bit over the last decades.

    • ericd 9 hours ago

      Is it that hard to drill an 8cm hole to run some refrigerant pipes through the wall?

      • miki123211 8 hours ago

        Yes!

        Most of Europe has a "registered building" system, where buildings above a certain age are considered historic. Renovating those buildings is an extremely difficult, expensive, and bureaucratic process. You generally need to preserve the period-appropriate look and materials. An AC unit sticking out of a wall won't pass muster.

        Even newer buildings are problematic. an acquaintance of mine lives in an upper-middle-class apartment complex that was finished two or three years ago, and their architect has some claim in the contract that prevents residents from installing AC units to "preserve the building's unique look."

        The US is build around privately-owned housing (and hence creature comforts) a lot more than we are, so AC is a lot easier to implement there.

        • Levitz 6 hours ago

          >Most of Europe has a "registered building" system, where buildings above a certain age are considered historic.

          It feels weird to have to mention this, but although there are a lot of historical buildings in Europe, it's not the norm.

          Population grows. There was a noteworthy war not that long ago. The vast majority of buildings are not that old.

      • Klayy 8 hours ago

        That's not the only thing required to properly install an ac unit. Do you genuinely believe people die rather that drill a hole? Lile that's the blocker? What a weird take

        • ericd 4 hours ago

          I’ve installed them myself, there’s not a whole lot more to it. Even easier if you have double hung windows to mount one on, though my understanding is that they’re not that common in Europe.

          • Klayy 25 minutes ago

            Not a whole lot more? Mounting a 40kg external unit on the facade of a building on the 5th floor is nothing to you? And that's after you get a permit to install it on the facade, which you will likely not (depending on the country).

            If you have a balcony, you can mount the external unit there, but then you need to route the piping to the room(s) that need AC. Then you need to cover the pipes somehow, which is still perfectly doable, but goes way way beyond "drilling a hole".

            You can have a portable unit, but it's loud, takes up space indoors and needs to be stored somewhere most of the year when it's actually cold rather than super hot.

      • adrianN 7 hours ago

        If you rent the place and your landlord doesn’t want it you’re out of luck. If you own the place and your neighbors don’t like the noise of your AC you’re out of luck too. If your building is one of the many buildings protected for historic reasons only God can help you.

  • FacelessJim 11 hours ago

    Americans don’t get scolded enough for their abuse of AC. In terms of accounting for preventable waste of energy, US guzzles more electricity on cooling than most countries do on everything else.

    • Klonoar 11 hours ago

      Yes, but we’re at least not dying of sweat.

      We do a lot of things wrong but AC isn’t one of them.

      (Unless you’re in the PNW where they never needed it before recently, and somehow continue to build units without it)

    • pfdietz 11 hours ago

      "Abuse" -- what a BS term. It's used just as desired; how can that be "abuse"? Because we do what we want rather than what you want us to want?

    • boc 11 hours ago

      Are you going to also scold Americans for using heat in the winter?

      Our continent has more extreme weather than Europe... we've adapted accordingly because we value human lives. Have you?

      • anthk 11 hours ago

        Spain's continental climate has both subzero Winters and scorching Summers.

        • boc 11 hours ago

          And they had 101 people die of heat-related issues last month. [1] 3,832 Spaniards died in 2025 alone from heat. In 2022, 4,789 died, the all-time high.

          The entire United States had 2,325 heat-related deaths in 2023, which is the all-time high.

          Do the math (US pop 340M vs Spain 49M) and it gets really ugly.

          [1] https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/spain-records-h...

      • Numerlor 10 hours ago

        AC is sorely lacking in the EU, e.g. right now I have one in my office but not in my bedroom and nights are horrible, but I do read a lot about people overdoing it quite a bit with AC, aiming at 18-20°C during 30s outside which is a huge energy expenditure when a healthy human should be perfectly fine at higher temperatures

      • crote 7 hours ago

        When you refuse to build climate-appropriate homes with things like isolation and instead guzzle giant amounts of fossil-powered energy to compensate for it? Yes. That's not adapting, that's brute-forcing.

    • mcdonje 11 hours ago

      We deserve to be scolded for a lot of things, but not that.

    • bob001 10 hours ago

      Interesting, so that's the price you put on a life? And people say Americans are heartless capitalists.

  • anthk 11 hours ago

    Some buildings in Southern Europe have thick as hell walls which isolate from both heat and cold (the North can be really chilly near the Atlantic, and freezing away from the Mediterranean).

    • coryrc 9 hours ago

      That's a misconception. They are poor insulators, but they moderate temperature well. If the temperature outside is cold but sunny, the walls absorb heat from the sun during the day and retain it during the night. However, when you require heat input (cloudy days, average temperature less than desired interior temperature), the stone conducts it very well to the outside and you need much more power input than even crappy US stick-built houses with R-15 insulation. It's just that Southern Europe's climate is usually so mild it doesn't seem like it's more comfortable, but this situation demonstrates its inferiority well.

  • gonzo41 10 hours ago

    I think there's a bit of a definitional skew happening here. The data isn't that good around this stuff.

    Heat as the primary factor, vs heat related deaths is significant.

    Heat is a system stressor. There's plenty of people having heart attacks and dying from weight related issues that probably got pushed over the edge by a hot day in Nevada that are missed in official stats.

    • Ferret7446 10 hours ago

      I can't imagine this is significant unless there is a demonstrated reporting bias between the US and Europe. Otherwise I'd assume it's a wash

      • Filligree 9 hours ago

        There is. In Texas, if a field worker has a heart attack on a hot day it’ll be reported as a heart attack.

        In France, the same exact situation would be reported as a heat casualty leading to heart attack.

      • IneffablePigeon 8 hours ago

        There was a good More Or Less (uk radio programme) episode about this last week. Essentially, the European statistics on this tend to be based on excess mortality during hot periods, while US stats currently are much more about what words are used on death certificates. Very different measures and hard to compare.

        • verteu 7 hours ago

          You can compare modeled heat deaths across different countries, Western Europe is still significantly higher. Eg Figure 3C in https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7618246/

          It doesn't affect life expectancy much, because most deaths are among the elderly (70% over 80 IIRC).

      • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

        US numbers in the popular twitter stat are officially recoded heat deaths whereas EU numbers are all excess deaths. Supposedly if you look at excess deaths the numbers for both places look the same.

        IMO even that's not a proper comparison though because you cannot compare Alaska to Texas, or Rome to Helsinki and thus throwing all of these in together for discussing heat deaths us just pure nonsense and rage bait.

  • eisa01 10 hours ago

    Agree

    Especially as air conditioning are heat pumps.

    Would have helped solve the large dependency on natural gas heating for free as a byproduct!

    • basisword 9 hours ago

      In the UK my understanding is there are large subsidies for installing heat pumps in new builds - but you lose the subsidy if you include the cooling part.

      NB: a friend in construction explained this to me so I could be wrong but it would explain why even pretty fancy new apartments with heat pumps have no cooling.

      • jdkoeck 8 hours ago

        Same in France. The trick is to wait for a control visit, and then turn on the cooling.

      • roryirvine 1 hour ago

        For new builds the only subsidy is zero VAT, which now applies equally to all heat pump types, so this should hopefully change soon.

        Existing properties are eligible for the Boiler Upgrade Scheme which also now covers air to air (ie. reversible) systems.

        There's still a bit of "what? no radiators?!" cultural resistance to overcome, but I'd expect this to fall away quickly as the climate continues to warm.

  • g-b-r 10 hours ago

    Had the US not used air conditioning so much we probably wouldn't have this heatwave right now.

    Oh but what's the problem, just add more air conditioning! :facepalm:

    • cm2012 10 hours ago

      No, its almost negligible

      • g-b-r 8 hours ago

        What do you consider almost negligible?

    • stronglikedan 10 hours ago

      > Had the US not used air conditioning so much we probably wouldn't have this heatwave right now.

      Sure we would, since AC has nothing to do with it.

      • lazide 10 hours ago

        I think they’re arguing we’d be doing something about global warming instead of rage baiting each other from the comfort of our cool houses on social media while ignoring it, like we’re doing.

        Well, not really ignoring it, more like making it worse while setting giant piles of bills on fire.

      • Noaidi 9 hours ago

        If we were more exposed to the hot weather with no way to escape it maybe we would actually do something about climate change.

        By creating and artificial climate in all or our homes we are so disconnected from the world that we think technology will fix it.

        Just wait fro the wildfires to blow up this week in the western US. AC will not help.

    • g-b-r 6 hours ago

      Five downvotes, the blindness of Americans about their lifestyle is dismaying.

  • Aeolun 10 hours ago

    I think it's more that air conditioning is (currently) prohibitively expensive. The few people I know that have it spent several thousands of euros on their installations. That's not something most people have lying around.

    You'd think the government could subsidize aircon like they did solar for years, and both of those things combined would translate to very pleasant summers spent in energy neutral air conditioned homes.

    • mc32 10 hours ago

      You don't need to get central A/C or mini splits. You can use an efficient Window unit (not those single ducted portable units that are just barely better than nothing. if portable do dual ducted for efficiency) Those window units are available at Walmart in the US for a couple hundred apiece. Presumably hypermarts like Carrefour would carry them or some places that serve home improvement.

      • Retr0id 10 hours ago

        For some reason it's very hard to find window units for sale in the UK, single-duct portables are the only thing available for cheap (although it's a fairly easy mod to convert one to dual-duct).

        • antonvs 9 hours ago

          > For some reason

          The reason would most likely be low demand.

        • lrae 9 hours ago

          Probably because the UK - similar to most of Europe - does not use the US vertically sliding sash window type, does it? The typical "walmart window AC" does just not really exist in (most of) Europe, because the windows for it don't exist, afaik.

          Edit: Turns out, sash windows are more commonly found in the UK (compared to other European countries), but still not as common as in the US. So, UK = not as hot (so far), thus still probably not worth it (yet) as a market.

          • nemomarx 9 hours ago

            Why are the windows different, actually? They don't seem to be smaller overall, just skinnier and taller?

            But you should still be able to get two tubes fitted into any kind of window with the right seals. If you were really up for renovations you could get closeable exhaust holes punched through your brick or something maybe.

            • lrae 9 hours ago

              Sash windows are just not as common. Seems like they are in the UK somewhat, though numbers I found vary, but overall in Europe they're pretty uncommon.

              And yes, there are options for tubes/ducts for the more common window types. Like tilt-and-turn windows, horizontally sliding or all the other kinds of inward or outward opening windows - but most of them are the ducted portable units the original comment was speaking of, which aren't great. There are also some better portable split units, but those are pricier and the install is not as easy. (They're great though.)

              • mc32 9 hours ago

                one issue with tilt and turn is getting window screens for them. It's possible but mostly they get installed on the inside if you have the proper wall spacing that allows window to function without interfering with the screen. mini splits are great but it's much more money than a simple window unit or portable unit.

            • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

              Living in the US I honestly miss the German windows that swing open. You can open the entire window whereas sliding windows can only ever open halfway.

              I also sometimes miss being able to stick my head out the window but that's a tradeoff about screens and in the end of the day I prefer not to have to worry about bugs.

              • asdff 5 hours ago

                I have a swing out window in the US. Fun cranking the lever.

          • asdff 5 hours ago

            I have a skinny tall window unit. It is called a casement unit. Pretty small market though at least in the US, only a few makes and models in comparison to the plethora of traditionally sized window units.

      • rcvassallo83 10 hours ago

        Efficient window unit?

        Best of the best is about 15-16 SEER

        That's entry level central HVAC efficiency

        Minisplits are far higher, 20+

        • mc32 10 hours ago

          If I don't have $30K to $50K to invest in an HVAC for the home, the next best is a relatively efficient Window unit that costs low hundreds and will help me stay alive in the heat. However enticing the price of a single duct portable unit is, do not buy it. It's a complete waste. If you go portable, go with the dual ducted one --but it's still not as good as a Window unit (which I would hope is obviously less efficient than a properly specced HVAC unit.

          • dgacmu 10 hours ago

            You can do a perfectly good, very efficient mini split for USD $5k. Avoids the leaks of window of portable units. And if you're feeling fancy you can get it as a cold climate heat pump. They're great options for retrofitting - can do multiple indoor air handlers, etc., for far less than $50k

          • fc417fc802 9 hours ago

            > It's a complete waste.

            That's completely false. They work just fine despite not being terribly efficient at least provided you install them correctly (but that caveat naturally applies to any window unit).

            In fact despite the low efficiency using only one in a single room is likely far cheaper than cooling the entire house. It's the same principle as an electric space heater versus a whole home heat pump.

            Of course running a minisplit only in the one room would be substantially better but for a 1 kW unit the difference is less than $1 per day (unless you're subject to the California electric grid I guess).

            • omnimus 5 hours ago

              They work ok in some places where have insulated windows and some source of colder air to get in.

              Since these one tube systems just push hot air out, you are creating low pressure in your room and you will suck the air in from somewhere. Often times simply from outside from the leaky windows.

              I don't understand why it's hard to buy systems with two hoses that would keep the pressure in the room.

              • fc417fc802 5 hours ago

                Insulated windows? That would apply equally to any other system. Where care is required is sealing around whatever passes through the window.

                As to the negative pressure, personally I just leave the door to the room cracked open very slightly. But if you have central heat ducts air will get sucked in through that no problem.

                • omnimus 4 hours ago

                  What i mean is that if you don’t have somewhere to take the colder air to take from you just end up sucking hot air in.

                  In system where the pressure would be equalized the leaks would be much smaller. For some reason it's impossible to buy these type units in EU.

          • sneak 9 hours ago

            I’m extremely happy with my single duct unit for cooling my bedroom in Berlin for the 3-6 weeks a year it is required.

          • ericd 1 hour ago

            Our mini split cost $3k, and it was on the relatively expensive end of options, there were many <$1k.

    • stevage 9 hours ago

      It's strange what people think is expensive. Double glazing is very expensive but no one in Europe would go without it. Aircon is not expensive within the context of a house's construction costs.

      • basisword 9 hours ago

        >> Double glazing is very expensive but no one in Europe would go without it.

        This isn’t true. I’ve lived in 3 places in London with single glazing. They’re surprisingly common. All new properties come with it but the majority of our housing stock is old.

        There’s also little comparison between air con and double glazing. One will be helpful for 4-6 months of the year and reduce my energy bills. The other will be necessary at most 1-2 weeks a year and will cost me thousands of pounds up front. Most people simply can’t afford that.

        • jdkoeck 8 hours ago

          Unless the aircon is a heat pump, in which case it’s also useful in the winter, it’s more efficient and carbon neutral if your electricity grid is decarbonised.

          If most people can’t afford a heat pump, why do we entertain the idea of making them pay an order of magnitude more to better insulate their home, which doesn’t even work in the end?

          You’ve been misinformed by European media. Please do your research, it’s all online.

          • basisword 8 hours ago

            I don't think you have any conception of how little money most people have. Why would I spend £15-20k I don't have on a heat pump so I can get 'free' air con when my house is already heated via another method? Most people don't have £500 spare for a portable air con unit.

            On top of that, until a few months ago, government subsidies for heat pumps didn't apply to the versions that include air con so anyone who did get a heat pump didn't get that version.

            >> why do we entertain the idea of making them pay an order of magnitude more to better insulate their home

            We don't. There have been various schemes over the last couple of decades where people could have this done for free or at very low cost.

            >> You’ve been misinformed by European media. Please do your research, it’s all online.

            I suggest you do the same.

            • jdkoeck 8 hours ago

              Something needs to be done with the heat. The common euro talking point: aircon doesn’t solve the problem, let’s insulate instead (an order of magnitude more expensive). Apparently you entertain an even more absurd idea: let’s just do nothing, because everyone is too poor. That’s just wrong, plenty of home owners or real estate owners have the means to foot the bills, especially if regulation mandates or subsidises heat pumps.

              Besides that, just know you’re participating in a system of belief that needlessly kills thousands each year (and many more to come, if you believe as I hope that climate change is real). Just dwell on it a little. Thousands dead because of ideological comfort and resistance to change, which in and of itself is a weird form of climate skepticism.

              If you answer this, please address each of my points from both comments. You have adressed none so far.

              • omnimus 5 hours ago

                Let me introduce you to… cold related deaths. They are 8x more common in europe than heat deaths.

                Since both of the cases happen mostly indoors we can assume it's both thanks to state of the buildings.

                Not everyone can afford AC or insulation and cold used to be and still a bigger problem. Heating is absurdly expensive with leaky building so people prioritize insulating.

                “Ideological comfort” lol stop it what the hell. Do you think people in europe wouldn't like to have AC if they could reasonably have it?

                • jdkoeck 5 hours ago

                  « Heating is absurdly expensive with leaky building so people prioritize insulating. »

                  Nope, heat pumps are cheaper and more efficient. Insulating did not even make a dent in reducing emissions in Germany after years of trying.

                  Whataboutism about cold related deaths doesn’t change anything about the heat related deaths. Did you know the Philippines lose fewer people to heat than Europe, per capita? They have AC.

                  Again, you’ve been misinformed. Please research the subject, use an LLM, whatever you need. The information is right there.

                  • omnimus 4 hours ago

                    I don't think you realize how old buildings work and that majority of people in europe live in apartment buildings often 50+ old and they rent it.

                    Would love to see you convince the landlords to refurbish the building to use expensive heatpumps when gas is already in place. Also heatpumps just like any other heating solution sucks without insulation.

                    It would be better to look at new buildings and you will find out that yes even europeans when building new get AC/heatpumps and solar and all the good stuff.

                    The thing is - I as european don't know a single person who has or is building a new house. I know few that live in a house but most prefer appartments.

                    • jdkoeck 2 hours ago

                      > Would love to see you convince the landlords to refurbish the building to use expensive heatpumps when gas is already in place.

                      They've been redoing the insulation since new regulation was enforced in France and Germany, it's been years now. So, that kind of thing is doable, except billions have been spent for a dubious result (look it up, Germans heat just as much as before). I am appalled at the complete lack of information on these subjects. For shame.

                      EDIT: Fact checking myself, the Germans have been reducing their heating, but significantly lower than expected because of a rebound effect (part of the efficiency gain is converted into comfort).

            • mappu 4 hours ago

              Hold on - 15k GBP?

              An ordinary heatpump for an ordinary house should cost something like 3000 NZD including labor for installation. What are we doing differently?

              • rcxdude 3 hours ago

                Usually it's installers taking the piss on quotes because it's not a standard thing and they don't want to deal with it or think they can get away with it. The US has a similar issue in some places for heat pumps (but not AC, despite being the same damn thing).

      • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

        Double glazing safes heating and cooling cost though. A large part of the cultural difference and willingness to spend on AC comes from the fact that central Europe only in recent decades got so hot.

        Of course thinking a cold is caused by being cold doesn't help either...

    • d3Xt3r 9 hours ago

      You don't even need an expensive AC. If you can't afford one, you can just get an evaporative cooler[1] for $100 or lesser[2]. Possibly even cheaper if you don't mind buying a second-hand unit.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evaporative_cooler

      [2] https://www.amazon.com/s?k=Evaporative+cooler

      • alamortsubite 9 hours ago

        Those really only work in very dry climates. So some of Europe, but not places like the UK where the conference was cancelled.

      • crote 7 hours ago

        The main reason high heat causes issues in Europe is due to the high humidity, so you can't get rid of body heat as your sweat won't evaporate. It's why 35C in the shade might be perfectly fine in Nevada but absolute hell in the UK.

        For exactly the same reason an evaporative cooler isn't going to work: there's no "space" in the air for the water to evaporate into.

    • TulliusCicero 8 hours ago

      A basic window AC unit costs a few hundred bucks.

      • Aeolun 5 hours ago

        Not anywhere I’m aware of. Maybe the outer unit, then you need the inside, you need a licensed technician to install it, you need it to not look hideous and tank your house price. There is several thousand euros. You also need a larger unit because the rooms are too large to take one of the smaller units.

        • HeyImAlex 5 hours ago

          They're talking about window units, not heat pump systems or central air. It's a complete AC that sits in your window. It can't cool a very large space (even in apartments people may have more than one), but it's cheap and easy to install (and equally easy to remove). It might be unsightly on a house, but a lot of that is probably just cultural norms. They're very common in NYC, where a lot of housing was built before central air became the default.

        • asdff 5 hours ago

          I think you are thinking of mini splits, and not what americans would call a window unit. I got my window unit for $100 off craigslist and put it in myself without needing any tools.

    • trollbridge 8 hours ago

      I recently bought a window unit AC for $10 at a yard sale.

  • mylifeandtimes 10 hours ago

    Air conditioning only works for things inside of buildings. Not so good for the plants and animals our lives depend on.

    And it raises the heat outside of buildings. Not so good for people who have to be outside, think first responders etc.

    "just turn on the AC and keep burning the world down" isn't really the answer.

    • lazide 10 hours ago

      Weirdest argument to keep letting 100k grandmas die from heat every summer I’ve ever heard.

      • bad_haircut72 9 hours ago

        They're not saying dont do it, just that its not really a total solution

        • zeusdclxvi 9 hours ago

          They are saying not to do it though and their arguments are awful

      • Noaidi 9 hours ago

        100k grandmas die from heat every summer because of our ignorance of climate change and a propaganda machine that denies that it is real.

        • Larrikin 9 hours ago

          Is this an argument to do nothing and let people die because there exist awful people in the world that want to profit from climate change? You can do walk and chew bubble gum in this fight.

    • yieldcrv 9 hours ago

      Europeans are so unpatched, I hope they never fix this

    • xoa 9 hours ago

      >And it raises the heat outside of buildings.

      No it doesn't. Seriously, where does this meme even come from? It should be pretty obvious just from a solar insolation map that AC is just noise vs the sun. The energy usage is tiny vs vehicles or non-heat pump heating and only electric. What changes temperature overall is the balance of thermal retention by the atmosphere vs radiation into space, hence why net increases in GHG are so dangerous. And at the ground level similarly how heat is dumped to atmosphere. Greenery, whites, shade etc is good, asphalt, mass standard glass is bad (hence many cities being heat islands). Old, leaky units sure, we absolutely should work to reduce that. But it's astonishing how people claim AC makes the outdoors hotter so consistently.

      • Noaidi 9 hours ago

        > No it doesn't.

        Yes, it does. It may be small temperature increase but AC use increases outside temperatures. It is just physics.

        Here is a simple diagram: https://www.lozierheatingcooling.com/filesimages/heatPump.jp...

        • Larrikin 9 hours ago

          Give a chart with actual numbers on the increase in temperature versus the sun. Not a diagram from an elementary science textbook on how air conditioners work.

          • Noaidi 9 hours ago

            I’m not debating that the sun is stronger heating source. I’m just saying air-conditioning increases climate change because it uses fossil fuels and also the law of thermodynamics dictates that he will be created in this instance.

            • hn_throwaway_99 8 hours ago

              > I’m just saying air-conditioning increases climate change because it uses fossil fuels

              It would actually be a much better global warming mitigation strategy to install bidirectional heat pumps (A/C in the summer, heat in the winter) that runs on electricity (which is increasingly produced using renewables) and then get rid of fossil-fuel burning furnaces.

            • robhlt 8 hours ago

              Air conditioners don't need to use fossil fuels. Solar power and AC work really well together because peak solar energy is exactly when you need AC the most.

              No heat is created either, that would explicitly violate the first law of thermodynamics. An air conditioner powered by solar energy (or anything solar powered) ends up releasing the exact same amount of "excess" heat as the sunlight would have if it hadn't been absorbed by the panels.

              • ssl-3 7 hours ago

                They don't always overlap well -- certainly, not exactly. Thermal lag is a thing, and it is promoted by increases in both insulation and mass.

                As an example of thermal lag: My present home doesn't have aircon upstairs. I've got a room with a west-facing window up there, and I just happen to chart temperatures in that room.

                The daily temperature peaks in that room during the warmer months tend to happen at night -- sometimes, as late as midnight. The daily temperature minimums tend to happen around noon.

                This suggests that solar power is least-useful for that particular room when solar availability is greatest. It doesn't overlap very well at all.

                (I'm still looking into installing fairly modest solar rig, though, just to help offset my own baseload when I can and maybe make extended power outages more survivable.)

              • thayne 7 hours ago

                > An air conditioner powered by solar energy (or anything solar powered) ends up releasing the exact same amount of "excess" heat as the sunlight would have if it hadn't been absorbed by the panels.

                Sure. But solar panels are intentionally designed to absorb a lot of energy. So if you are putting the panels over a dark surface, like asphalt, you'll probably have a net zero effect on heat. If you put them over something light colored, you are now converting more visible light that would have been reflected into space into heat. To be clear, that is still a lot better than burning fossil fuels, but it isn't completely free either.

                • yrjrjjrjjtjjr 6 hours ago

                  You gotta take entropy into account too. Sunshine is high grade energy, infrared is low grade. Reflecting high grade energy is a huge waste. You could even (in theory) run a solar powered space-ir-dumper and end up with net cooling of earth.

                  • thayne 5 hours ago

                    Solar panels work by taking "high grade" energy from sunshine, doing some useful work with it, and increasing entropy by producing heat. That heat does radiate energy away at infrared wavelengths, but then greenhouse gases come into play. Greenhouse gases are very effective at reflecting infrared radiation back down to earth, so the heat is trapped.

        • chmod775 9 hours ago

          This effect is temporary. Otherwise one could run their AC once for a few minutes and then it'd be cold inside your home for the rest of the year until you turn up heating.

          In reality equilibrium is restored quickly (and the thermal mass we're cooling/heating here is insignificant anyhow).

          • jackyinger 8 hours ago

            That heat goes out into the world, it doesn’t just disappear

            • ericd 8 hours ago

              Eventually radiates out into space ;-) It doesn’t disappear, but we don’t need to care much about infrared passing Alpha Centauri.

              • thayne 7 hours ago

                Except we have an lot of greenhouse gases that are really good at reflecting that infrared back down to earth.

              • rippeltippel 6 hours ago

                Eventually yes, perhaps. But first heat gets trapped in Earth's atmosphere, because pollution and greenhouse gases make it hard for it to dissipate into space. It's called global warming, and no - it's not a hoax.

                • ericd 5 hours ago

                  Heh yes, I’m aware, thanks.

            • ssl-3 8 hours ago

              The house being cooled by aircon is within the same world as everything else is.

              This doesn't mean that there's zero heat added locally (as many seem fond of suggesting): The compressors and circulation blowers and fans don't run for free, and every Joule of electricity they consume is ultimately converted to a Joule of heat in a process that wouldn't occur in the absence of aircon. That's not zero.

              But in very broad strokes, it's not very significant. It's somewhat akin to running a refrigerator inside of a kitchen.

              With aircon, the refrigerator is the size a whole house. That certainly sounds huge, and it is huge. But that refrigerated building is inside of a room that is the size of the Earth's atmosphere, which is very obviously vast in ways that kitchens simply are not.

              It doesn't really matter. Millions of homes with aircon don't mean much when the atmosphere is millions of times bigger than they are.

          • thayne 7 hours ago

            The process of moving heat from your house outside also creates excess heat, because no AC system is completely efficient (and it can't be because of the second law of thermodynamics).

        • brigandish 8 hours ago

          It does on my balcony where the fan pumps to, which has made doing any gardening difficult, but to the overall outside temperature it's just a drop in the ocean.

          • brookst 8 hours ago

            Sure. And each car is just a drop in the ocean of CO2. And each plane flight. And smoking one cigarette.

            Humans have a really hard time understanding compounding risk. But there are billions of us. How many billions of drops can you handwave away?

            • rpnx 7 hours ago

              It is worth noting that if the Air Conditioner is powered by electricity that came from solar panels, the net heat produced compared to letting the sun heat solar panel colored ground is exactly 0.

              Air Conditioners do not produce a net heating effect unless you power them by burning fossil fuels.

              • manwe150 7 hours ago

                Not net zero exactly, since it’s a flows and rates problem, not static equilibrium. So it could even be strongly positive effect or negative effect based on how quickly the heat gets radiated back into space depending on how the wavelengths interact with the surroundings and the atmosphere.

                Our current cities and infrastructure are designed to be black heat sinks to soak up heat and hold onto it and ground level. But there is research into what would happen if we flipped that design around.

            • hmry 7 hours ago

              8 billion people running a 2000 watt AC continuously for 8 hours a day = 5 trillion watts of heat. (Only the electricity consumed by the AC is turned into new heat. The heat from inside the house would have moved outside anyway, at the same rate, since it's an equilibrium)

              The sun = 175 quadrillion watts of heat.

              So I would say, the heat from running ACs is not significant. It's also additive with all the other existing forms of energy use we have. Unlike greenhouse gases, which are multiplicative.

            • Levitz 6 hours ago

              When you enact 0.1% changes through a population, that's still a 0.1% change.

              "If we all do this little thing" thinking is utter nonsense. If all of human consumption or contribution to warming or what-have-you is 1000, applying a change that lowers that to 999 is not doing anything more than that.

              This here is not even a 0.1% thing. You could probably get a better result by telling people to read ebooks rather than hardback. It's just absurd.

        • wiseowise 8 hours ago

          > it’s just physics

          > provides diagram with zero evidence that AC meaningfully influences temperature

          Clap, clap.

      • verteu 7 hours ago

        This simulation claims otherwise (though I agree it's hard to believe):

        > A significant degradation of external thermal comfort can also be seen in the simulations, as heat released by AC systems warms the outside air (see figure 3). The temperature increases due to AC depend on the time of day and on the characteristics of the heat wave, mainly its intensity. On average, the duration spent under high heat stress conditions in the streets is increased by about 20 min per day because of AC.

        https://iopscience.iop.org/article/10.1088/1748-9326/ab6a24#...

      • thayne 7 hours ago

        The way AC works is by transferring heat from one place (inside) to somewhere else (outside), and it takes energy to do this which produces even more heat, which is generally in the outside part of the AC system. This isn't something you can engineer away either, it's a result of the second law of thermodynamics.

        Is that increase small compared to other things, like surfaces that absorb more solar radiation? Maybe. It depends on a lot of factors, but the amount it increases the heat of the outside is certainly non-zero.

        • PowerElectronix 7 hours ago

          The difference in ambient temperature due to air conditioning pumping heat outside is unmeasurably low. If all the power a city uses went to AC, it'd still be negligible compared with the sun irradiation on its surface.

          • thayne 6 hours ago

            Over the scale of an entire city, it might be negligable, I don't know, I haven't done the math. My guess would be it is measurable, but not a lot, probably less than a degree. But the GP said "no it doesn't" increase heat. I'm just saying that even if it is a very small amount, it does increase heat.

            And if you stand near an AC unit, you can definitely feel heat coming from it.

            • gsquaredxc 6 hours ago

              You can reason it out (in a way that might make Fermi proud) pretty easily: a very large AC unit can be powered by a very small (relative) solar panel, where the solar panel is maybe 20% efficient. Thus, solar irradiation is substantially higher than AC power usage.

              • vanviegen 5 hours ago

                That's only accounting for the energy the airco unit consumes. What the airco unit does is remove heat from the inside of the house, and dump it outside. That effect is about 4 times larger.

          • toasty228 4 hours ago

            1c to 2c according to simulation in Paris, even up to 3-4c for some streets

            The exhaust of a single car/plane/ship are also immeasurable, yet here we are...

    • AstroNutt 9 hours ago

      It's just a heat transfer. Refrigerant inside the evaporator picks up heat and transfers it to the condensing unit outside.

      They don't create heat. It was there in the first place, just a different location.

      • epgui 8 hours ago

        They don’t create energy, but they do create heat. It’s entropy, can’t avoid it.

      • brookst 8 hours ago

        Wait so they’re perfectly efficient?

      • MobiusHorizons 8 hours ago

        Yes heat pumps move heat that already existed from the cold side to the hot side, but they also consume some energy to fight entropy, meaning they pump more heat to the hot side than they remove from the cold side. This is a net heat gain, equivalent to the energy consumed in running the AC. The value may be considered negligible compared to other sources, but it can still be on the order of 500w per room, which adds up quickly if everyone is doing it.

        Of course air conditioning is reasonably well suited to be a solar load during peak hours, but in most parts of the world if everyone just installed AC units like are common in many parts of the US it would mean a huge amount of extra fossil fuels burnt.

    • jdkoeck 8 hours ago

      That kind of thinking kills more people each year in Europe than guns do in the USA. Let that sink in.

      • robocat 7 hours ago

        So the stats say we need to encourage more guns and shooting deaths in the US...

        Maybe Europe should sell guns to the states - ideally sold in €

      • Levitz 6 hours ago

        It's not an apples to apples comparison. 80%+ of deaths because of heat in Europe are 65+ years old.

        When you start handling that range you've to take into account that these people are going to die because of something, save a guy from heat here and that's an extra death because of cancer 4 years later.

        Now I'm not saying it's a thing to be ignored, but be wary of playing quick and dirty with statistics.

        • jdkoeck 5 hours ago

          That’s a fair point. More years of life lost due to gun deaths.

          I still like to draw a parallel, because they’re both deaths that we have the means to prevent, but the culture perpetuates the problem. That culture needs to change (doable in Europe with regard to AC because heatwaves will snap people out of denial, much harder or impossible to solve the gun culture problem in the US).

    • ericd 8 hours ago

      > "just turn on the AC and keep burning the world down" isn't really the answer.

      This is an outdated attitude. PV solar panel output correlates really well with air conditioning demand, no need for storage. Overcool your thick-walled masonry buildings during the day as a form of energy storage.

    • bandrami 8 hours ago

      I have a proposal to place a small, intelligent demon in every windowsill in the UK...

    • userbinator 6 hours ago

      "just turn on the AC and keep burning the world down" isn't really the answer

      It is, because we're not going to be here forever, so might as well make the best of it. Trying to stop entropy by making everyone's lives worse is ultimately futile, but a certain group of activists have certainly been trying...

  • 1970-01-01 9 hours ago

    Absolutely this. Arrogance isn't going to hold against the sun. It's very stupid of EU to ignore the fact this is how hot it will be from now on, and 1000 year old dwellings using only windows to cool are no longer acceptable living standards.

    • antonvs 9 hours ago

      > Arrogance isn't going to hold against the sun.

      You mean against human-induced global warming.

      • wiseowise 8 hours ago

        Keep dying from the heat while the oligarchs live their lives in villas near expensive lakes.

        • ActorNightly 7 hours ago

          The thing about rich people is their life is only possible by paying enough people to fight entropy. Robotics isn't advanced, and nobody rich is even close to being smart enough to be able to maintain equipment on their own.

        • croes 1 hour ago

          They will die too because global warming brings mosquitoes and their diseases to those lakes.

          Not to mention that fungi start to adapt to higher temperatures so The Last of Us becomes a more possible scenario.

        • europoorean 30 minutes ago

          The wealthiest Americans have a life expectancy similar to that of the poorest Europeans in western European countries

          https://www.brown.edu/news/2025-04-02/wealth-mortality-gap

          Heat related deaths affect the oldest more than the young. The old Europeans dying during a heatwave do so because they are alive. The old Americans that would have died in a heatwave were already dead.

          I hope the USA can fix its healthcare system.

  • Grimblewald 9 hours ago

    Aicon is reasonable for areas where it's required, but "solving" things in areas where for millenia it wasnt required simply removes the pressure to act. This would be the opposite of what's required right now, which is decisive and heavy action on something we've been inactive on for way too long.

    • nradov 9 hours ago

      Nothing that European countries can do will remove the need for more air conditioning.

    • skybrian 9 hours ago

      Letting people suffer to get political advantage isn't right, even if it's for a good cause.

      • antonvs 9 hours ago

        We don’t need to make that choice, since collectively people inflict these things on themselves anyway. It’ll be interesting to see whether it leads to any sensible action. The cynical narrator in me says “it won’t.”

  • alexhans 9 hours ago

    Living in London and Dublin, what I've observed is that we get the following contradictory statements:

    - "We don't need AC, It's only hot a few times during the year." - "Oh what a terrible heat, global warming is getting worse every year."

    Pair to that the fact that in many places windows don't open all the way due to bureocratic regulations and many interior designs are very questionable in terms of air flow and you get some unpleasant scenarios.

    • Gigachad 8 hours ago

      For the wind out ones with the chain at the bottom, you can open up the box and remove the limiter that stops it opening all the way. They make the same opener for ground level and highrises with just a limiter keeping it mostly closed when installed high up.

    • thayne 7 hours ago

      It seems like a bidirectional heat pump would be a good solution, since the same device can be used to heat the building when it's cold. And a lot of europe (including the mentioned UK and Greece) don't often get cold enough that a heat pump is inefficient.

      • msh 7 hours ago

        The uk gets cold enough that a air to water heatpump is a better heating solution.

        • fancyfredbot 4 hours ago

          Air to water heat pumps are typically less efficient than air to air. Both will work in cold UK temperatures. However the water is often heated to a higher temperature which can reduce efficiency.

          • msh 4 hours ago

            That seems to not hold up when checking. Fx according to https://daikinquebec.net/en/heat-pump/air-vs-water-vs-geothe...

            Air2air have a cop of 2.5 - 3.2 while air2water it’s 3.0 to 3.5

            • roryirvine 2 hours ago

              The main benefit is that air to water systems are compatible with existing central heating systems - but only if the radiators are sized correctly, and often they're not.

              If you factor in the need to replace radiators etc, then the ability to act as an air con probably makes air to air the better choice. Now that the Boiler Upgrade Scheme grants cover air to air as well as air to water, I'd expect them to become much more common in the UK than they have been until now.

        • thayne 2 hours ago

          It isn't as effective, but air to water can be bidirectional. Probably good enough for a couple of times a year or so when there is a heat wave.

    • ffsm8 7 hours ago

      Northern Europe will actually get colder with global warming... Well, only on average, the heat waves in the summer will stay.

      But it's always funny how many people don't really realize how soon the AMOC will likely collapse (probably within the next 30 years - definitely within the next 70 years) and just unlivable most houses will consequently become, as what we currently consider an extreme winter would consequently become a mild one... The infrastructure just hasn't been built for -20°C

      • jjmarr 7 hours ago

        The Day After Tomorrow (2004) predicted this.

        • ffsm8 6 hours ago

          It's not a good movie though, the entertainment value may be debatable - but it did not give a realistic scenario to the AMOC collapse.

          It's only slightly related insofar an amoc collapse would make winters in Europe more severe (not in USA) - but it's only "inspired by" such a scenario and should not be seen as a plausible future prediction

      • hyperman1 4 hours ago

        One part of this is how hard it is to translate the impact to now-scientists.

        E.g. 2 degrees temperature raise did not sound bad to me, untill someone explained to me this is from ground to space, and the actual raise is double or triple that. Then we looked on a map and found current day Morocco seems close to what my Belgium is expected to become in that scenario. I still am not capable of deciding how realistic this is.

        So you made me surf to amocscenarios.org, and even if this thing is reliable, it still is hard to interprete. My winter goes from -5 every decade to -18. I've never had either in my life. What does this even mean? Can my ww2 rebuilt house deal with -5, as it supposedly already did? What to do forcdealing with -18?

        And that's the opinion of someone knowing a little bit. Now go to someone who has to managed 10 of life's disasters over his lifetime and explain how bad this really is.

    • manmal 7 hours ago

      TIL there will be 35 degrees Celsius in London today. I thought that basically never happens. I remember people telling me a few years ago that they are lucky to ever get 30 degrees.

    • vanviegen 5 hours ago

      Well yeah, it takes time to adjust to new circumstances. Especially since weather events don't come with any documentation saying things like "this will happen every two years now".

      • alexhans 4 hours ago

        I'd argue that these temperatures are not a new thing. It's just a contradiction that is almost a tradition at this point, imho.

        • vanviegen 3 hours ago

          You could argue that. But you'd be wrong. :-)

  • dylanz 9 hours ago

    I live in Las Vegas and one year at the start of summer my AC went out. It took a week to order the part needed and make the fix. I lived out of casinos for that week (using HotelTonight to get a different place each night) and it was pretty fun. I gained 10lbs. That said, AC's are a necessity out here.

    • barbazoo 8 hours ago

      I'd probably invest in a secondary AC and a generator/battery to power it. That heat is brutal.

      • ericd 8 hours ago

        Absolutely. In the northeast US we have triple redundancy on heat, because it’s potentially life-threatening to have the heat go out in a blizzard with subzero temps. I’d treat cooling redundancy as similarly important in Nevada, especially if not very mobile.

    • oceanplexian 8 hours ago

      I live a few hours outside Las Vegas and it's a lot more survivable than you would think given primitive technology and some knowledge.

      I have one of those portable evaporative coolers and they don't need much power (50-100W). I have one and measured ~110F input and 78F on the output side using nothing more than water and a fan, pretty remarkable. The trick is staying out of direct sunlight, and the body can cool itself well with the same mechanism. Sweating is extremely effective due to the low humidity.

      • pinkgolem 7 hours ago

        I mean... I need ~120 watt an hour to keep the house between 20-23 C.

        • kaonwarb 7 hours ago

          In Nevada?

          • pinkgolem 5 hours ago

            Fair, Germany

            Only over 35C

            But it's not even a well isolated house.

  • JadeNB 9 hours ago

    I don't mean to pick on an irrelevant detail, but I genuinely don't know how to parse ">10x fewer deaths per capita." Does it mean "fewer than 1/10 as many deaths per capita," i.e., the ratio (heat related deaths in Nevada per capita)/(heat related deaths in Greece per capita) is less than 1/10?

  • barbazoo 8 hours ago

    Went to Germany during the recent heat wave and few of the public buildings and none of the private ones had AC. I found the whole endeavor much more very stressful because of the heat.

  • manwithopinions 8 hours ago

    There are practical reasons why it isn’t widespread:

    1. Energy is very expensive relative to the U.S. 2. Houses are old old and retrofitting air conditioning is very difficult 3. Houses are more than 1 story with many small rooms making portable and window mounted units unsuitable for a whole house

    All modern apartment buildings in London are built with air conditioning because a central air system and district power make it cost efficient.

    If you visit a hot place like Dubai or Bangkok, there are endless indoor malls with air conditioning that serve as a place to shop and a third space. Much of Europe doesn’t have that.

    The U.S. specifically is also very car-centric. You walk out of your air conditioned house into your air conditioned car and drive to your air conditioned mall. Much of Europe… isn’t. People walk, you can’t avoid the heat.

    Yes, certainly, there is a cultural resistance to air conditioning but adding air conditioning to homes isn’t going to stop people dying, homes are the least consequential part of heat in day to day life. Health advice in a heatwave is pretty much: don't go outside.

  • zarzavat 8 hours ago

    As a European I agree, at least for Western Europe.

    It's not just the resistance but the price. There is tremendous price gouging in the AC industry. The real cost of a mini split system is the low hundreds of dollars but good luck finding one for that price in Europe. If it were regulated as a life critical technology and not as a luxury then it could be substantially cheaper.

    • sokoloff 6 hours ago

      Low thousands (or very high hundreds), perhaps. It’s still one fairly heavy outdoor unit, a moderately bulky indoor unit, a pump, two radiators, insulated pipes and control wires between, a circuit (wiring and an overcurrent device) and a disconnect, and a couple hours of labor from two tradespeople.

      That’s unlikely to be sustainable for an out of pocket of a low hundreds figure.

      • zarzavat 5 hours ago

        You can buy a new Samsung mini split today for around $200 in asia, so with tax and shipping let's say $300 max. These things are mass-produced in the hundreds of millions of units. They're cheap and plentiful.

        Obviously the installation will be more expensive in Europe due to higher wages, but the units themselves should be dirt cheap.

  • sph 7 hours ago

    [flagged]

    • alephnerd 7 hours ago

      > To hear Americans jump at the chance to comment about Europeans and their AC usage

      A lot of Americans would be indifferent if it wasn't for Europeans (mostly Germans ime - Southern, Central, and Eastern Europeans are indifferent to supportive) who often try to act all superior about not using ACs or heat pumps because they supposedly "cause colds" or are somehow "unnatural" or try to make it a moral action despite a large portion of Americans using GreenTech to subsidize AC spend.

      TBH, a lot of distaste Americans have for "Europeans" is basically a distaste for DACH residents weird sense of superiority (especially racial - you guys don't realize it but you tend to treat Black, Asian, and Hispanic Americans negatively until we wave our passport and Amex Gold/Plat). Most other Europeans are much more pleasant to be around with.

      • bvanheu 6 hours ago

        I think USA'n suffers more from discomfort than European, and the gp comment is an attempt at explaining that.

        this is also my experience as a north American, sweating is a no-go and they clutch AC at 18C.

    • CaptWorld 7 hours ago

      Not beating the allegations of Europoor mentality. I'm not from USA

      • mschild 6 hours ago

        Price, mostly, isn't the issue.

        Living in Germany, rental apartments simply don't have AC. Even luxury apartments that are 4k+ per month typically dont. Thats changing very slowly but still a long way to go.

        A lot of landlords simply don't give a shit as they're not required to install one and since there is a housing shortage, good luck convincing them of anything.

        Even if you own your apartment, installing a split AC requires unanimous approval from the other apartment owners before you can install one because making any permanent modifications to the outside of the building (like drilling a hole) needs their permission.

        The older generation (generalising here) often has the opinion that the cold air from ACs is unhealthy and causes cold.

        Once you get past all of that, is when price can become the issue. The AC units, even top-of-the-line, cost around 1k-1.8k. Good luck finding someone to install it for you. You need an electrician and a licenced installer.

        I own my house so I dont need anyone's permission. The cheapest total cost (including the 1.2k for the unit I want) is 6k. Because apparently drilling 2 holes and, running the wire and coolant pipes is 4.8k.

        • lwansbrough 4 hours ago

          You can buy a portable unit for like 300e and seal the window with a piece of plexiglass with a hole in it. It's a pretty low barrier.

          • mschild 3 hours ago

            Sort of. We dont have sliding windows. Windows tilt in Germany so it's a weird shape you need to close up. Portable ACs come with a mesh cover that works OK but its not as good as a properly sealed window. They're also significantly less efficient and much louder.

            Midea has released the Porta split a few hears ago which was a game changer for many people. I currently have one cooling the bedroom.

            • dagenleg 2 hours ago

              Why is everyone on social media talking about Midea? I never see any other brand mentioned. Is this a coordinated marketing campaign?

    • ActorNightly 7 hours ago

      > us simply cannot have AC

      Im really curious how this works. Do standalone units not exist?

      • hannasm 7 hours ago

        Same question. Electricity and logistics are really the only physical barriers. With solar and a single mini split couldn't you essentially prevent heat death with some very high probability?

        Freezing to death in winter should be a harder problem at this point right?

        • doikor 6 hours ago

          Electricity and logistics solve the heating just as well. You can use the same device if you want to. Heat pump is just an AC run in reverse, literally all you need is a little valve to reverse the flow.

          • TylerE 5 hours ago

            As long as it's only a little below freezing. Try that in Norway, or even somewhere like Austria, and see how it goes.

            • asdff 5 hours ago

              Then you'd just use "old fashioned" electric heating

            • doikor 5 hours ago

              They work just fine until -25C or so. (COP around 3). After they they still do work you just fine but work effectively as resistive heaters as you approach COP of 1.

              Obviously you need a model they is made for which winters but people use them all over Finland including Lapland without any issues. If you want to save some money on the coldest days you burn some wood in the oven/fireplace if you have one.

              edit: heat pumps (both air and ground) have been very popular in the nordics for quite some time now. One big reason is that we have cheap electricity and very expensive oil/gas. Lately also municipal level central heating networks have been slowly moving to heat pumps as their source of heat.

      • sph 3 hours ago

        Some people rent. Some people can't afford one. Some people, like me, are in a short-term let in a country where it doesn't make sense to buy appliances if you're to leave after a few weeks.

        Now that I had to explain my personal living arrangement, am I please excused from the constant nagging about europoors and their stupid hangups about AC?

    • tgsovlerkhgsel 5 hours ago

      "Simply cannot have AC" is a problem we did to ourselves, or rather, the "its not so bad just suffer a bit" people are doing to the rest of the population.

      What are the reasons "most of us simply cannot have AC"? Either laws/regulations banning it or making it prohibitive, or living in rentals without proper protection.

      There is no reason why heat protection couldn't be mandated for rental units just like heating is required in winter. Or why tenants couldn't have a right to install AC at their own expense.

      Meanwhile, because permanent AC units are de facto impossible, the portable Mideas sell out as soon as the heat wave hits, and we're forced to run air conditioners with literally open windows just so we can run the hose through.

      (You should get one for next year, by the way. You probably missed the opportunity for this year unless you want to pay a scalper 2-3x the normal price, but they can be installed in essentially any window or balcony, are reasonably quiet, much better than the 'air hose out the window' monoblock units, and they fucking work)

    • lwansbrough 4 hours ago

      I realize you're aiming at Americans in general, but I'm Canadian. Most developed countries outside of Europe have AC readily available these days. The governance is a reflection of the people. Same can be said about the Americans.

      • sph 3 hours ago

        > I realize you're aiming at Americans in general, but I'm Canadian.

        Same difference.

    • europoorean 2 hours ago

      Heat affects the old disproportionately. Europeans have years of extra life expectancy (look at the Mediterranean countries, affected by the heat). It is not unexpected that more, older Europeans die during a heatwave. The Americans that would have died during a heatwave are already dead due to other causes.

      The AC debate is not an honest one (or just an ignorant take). I really hope Americans can.fix their healthcare system.

  • crote 7 hours ago

    Well yeah, because it requires re-engineering the entire built environment!

    Heat waves only became a serious problem in Europe in the last decade. The vast majority of buildings predate the need for air conditioning by several decades - and in plenty of cases by several centuries. The buildings are designed around being livable in a pre-climate-catastrophe climate without needing air conditioning - which is perfectly achievable if you aren't stupid enough to build a city in the middle of a desert.

    Adapting all those buildings and streets will take time. Blindly putting AC everywhere and forcing everyone to drive from building to building in an ACed car isn't going to work, that kind of wasteful behavior is how we got into this situation in the first place. You need to redesign the heat management, and you need to start with things like mandating shades to prevent heat from entering buildings in the first place, and planting trees to avoid the heat island effect.

    AC will indeed be needed to deal with the final heat peak when outside night temperature is in excess of 30C, but it isn't the one-size-fits-all solution for every heat-related problem it might seem at first glance. If your AC needs to run for more than a few days per year, you've seriously screwed up.

    • ianm218 7 hours ago

      This is completely ridiculous you just need to let people use AC properly and it will solve most of the problem with people dying. That doesn’t mean you need to go from place to place in AC or never be out of AC, but every person in southern Europe should have an AC unit in their bedroom and deaths will go down substantially.

      Another thing that would help is if Europe stopped being so averse to new construction so that people could build new buildings with central AC that matches the current reality of its climate and demographics, rather than the climate and demographics of last millennium.

      • crote 6 hours ago

        > you just need to let people use AC properly (..) every person in southern Europe should have an AC unit in their bedroom and deaths will go down substantially.

        Yes, exactly: install AC where it truly helps and where it is truly needed. That's the point I was trying to make. Most of the rest is solved far more efficient by things like installing shades. In other words: don't go all-out on giant whole-home AC without first stopping the huge inflow of new heat.

        > if Europe stopped being so averse to new construction

        We're not, there's plenty of new construction over in Europe.

        The difference is that European buildings are built to last, so structurally there's no need to tear them down after a couple of decades. They are perfectly usable for another half-century after a minor renovation (including retrofitting AC!), so why destroy a charming historic district for absolutely no reason?

        That doesn't mean buildings are never torn down, of course. Right now a lot of post-WWII rental units are being replaced by new construction, as they are architecturally nothing special and renovating them to modern standards is simply way more expensive than replacing them entirely.

        • tgsovlerkhgsel 5 hours ago

          I get rage when I hear those "5 clever tips to stay cool without A/C".

          Many buildings already have shades, but please tell me more how those shades and "properly ventilating during the night" (aka not getting sleep half the night due to outside noise) will keep my apartment at a livable temperature when the air temperature outside never drops below 23 degrees for more than an hour.

          You can't effectively remove the heat that has pooled in the apartment with a 2-3 degree temperature difference, let alone in the few hours where you actually have that difference.

          So because of thinking like the one in your post, we can't have real AC's (because to "protect the environment" we'd first need to install every other system that doesn't help then prove that with a mountain of paperwork), so my only option is to open the well-insulated window so I can stick the coolant hose of a portable unit through it.

          I think the "properly installed AC bad" mentality will only change once the entire population of renters has those inefficient portable units (that are de facto impossible to regulate) and even the anti-AC group realizes that encouraging "real" ACs is much better than the workarounds that the status quo forces.

        • pyridines 5 hours ago

          > no need to tear them down after a couple of decades

          Where are people constructing buildings that need to be torn down after a couple decades? This is a refrain I've heard about construction (in the US?) several times in discussions like these, and I find it very puzzling.

          • kharak 4 hours ago

            I believe Japan does it, for instance.

            https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Housing_in_Japan

            "An unusual feature of Japanese housing is that houses are presumed to have a limited lifespan, and are often torn down and rebuilt after a few decades,..."

          • bob1029 3 hours ago

            I've seen some 2020+ construction in the Texas market that might not make it much beyond 2040. If you want to see stuff that lasts, constrain year of construction to the 20th century on Zillow.

            I know of entire subdivisions where the new homes are being actively consumed by black mold due to insufficient HVAC capacity for latent heat removal. Every single central dehumidifier installed in those builds has lost its refrigerant charge due to some common manufacturer (Honeywell) defect. So, in some cases we didn't HVAC hard enough despite being America.

            I don't understand how you can maintain a civilization in a place like Miami or Galveston without modern hvac.

      • MrDresden 6 hours ago

        > "Another thing that would help is if Europe..."

        Europe is a continent with a lot of different countries, all with different laws and regulations. Even the ones who are in the European Union have different rules and regulations.

        So please realize that any blanket statements about Europe work as well as making one about the Americas (ie North/South).

        • nikanj 6 hours ago

          Europeans say ”Americans xxx while the French yyy” all the time. Member states should be compared to member states, or the US to the EU.

          • leononame 5 hours ago

            A US state is not a country. I get that there is a lot of federalism in the US and that states often have different laws and regulations, but the same is true for European countries. You can compare the US to Germany, or Sourh Carolina to Bavaria, by your own logic.

            • nikanj 1 hour ago

              You can compare all of the US to just a suburb of Paris, if you insist on making stupid comparisons, but lumping all member states into one monolith is pointless both ways. Oregon is incredibly different from Florida, and so is France from Romania

      • preisschild 1 hour ago

        > Another thing that would help is if Europe stopped being so averse to new construction so that people could build new buildings with central AC that matches the current reality of its climate and demographics, rather than the climate and demographics of last millennium.

        Agreed. I live in an apartment complex finished in 2020 and they have no provisions for AC, really not optimal. At least add provisions for holes so renters can easily install a mini split.

    • quotemstr 7 hours ago

      > Blindly putting AC everywhere

      ... actually works just fine. How do you think mass AC adoption in the US happened? Window units work just fine. Fancy splits and central ducting can come later.

      Don't let perfect be the enemy of the good.

      • crote 7 hours ago

        Look at the population graph of a city like Las Vegas. It basically didn't exist before the invention of AC.

        Window units don't work in most of Europe because our windows aren't compatible with them. If they were, I would have one.

        And again, it doesn't solve the core cause. If you want to cool down your home, your first step should be to stop heat from entering. If you can get the same result from €900 of shades and €100 of AC as from €1000 of AC, you'd have to be stupid to go for an energy-guzzling AC-only approach.

        • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

          I was under the same impression about window units till recently as well. However, I learned that there are units with hoses and foam seals that just require to put the window on tilt and then the hose goes out at the top and the surrounding area is sealed with the foam. Not as good as a minisplit but it works and is DIY.

          • physicsguy 6 hours ago

            This might sound ridiculous to you but in the U.K. we generally don’t have tilting windows. They are really common in Germany though.

            • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

              So you don't have sliding windows but also not tilting windows? They can only swing open?

              • physicsguy 5 hours ago

                Traditionally everyone had sash windows ("sliding windows") or casement windows ("swing open") made from wood. Nowadays sash windows are very expensive so almost everyone has casement windows, or even casement windows that look like sash windows, both constructed from UPVC. It's only in historic buildings people typically still install sash windows. I had to do that in my house because of it being a "conservation area" and it cost £14k for four timber double glazed sash windows! There are some UPVC sash windows now but they're pretty uncommon still.

                • asdff 5 hours ago

                  I actually have a casement AC window unit. Not sure if this is the same dimensions as a UK casement window. It is as if you took a window AC unit and made it vertical orientation. My window still slides up and blocks the remaining void, but I imagine it would work just fine if it swung out and you built a plexiglass or plywood cover. Maybe you can also unscrew the swinging window and put it away in a closet.

                  The AC unit is a little different than "traditional" window units. There is no slot or anything really to grab on to the window or the sill. It is mainly secured by a brace that is also not screwed into anything really, just directing the weight of the external portion of the unit into the side of the exterior wall.

          • imp0cat 5 hours ago

            The single hose units work. They have a lot of downsides though. They are heavy, loud and require a supply of fresh air. That means that your either do not block the window completely and draw hot air in, thus reducing the available cooling capacity of the unit, or seal the window and the unit will create low pressure area in your home and draw the air from elsehwere (via other leaking doors, windows or even bathroom fans - which can be a bit smelly).

            tl;dr If you are considering a portable AC unit, try to get a dual hose one, or save for a mini/multi split.

        • gsquaredxc 6 hours ago

          Wouldn’t someone that has to pay for an AC’s power bill be more aware of the cost-benefit analysis of energy efficiency over someone that doesn’t?

        • bob1029 3 hours ago

          I've got a concentric dual hose unit from Midea that I use in emergencies when my central unit is out. I just put the hose through the dog flap on the back door when I run it. I'm sure you could figure out a solution if you actually wanted to be comfortable.

        • tda 1 hour ago

          Though I fully agree a passive heat prevention solution is better, for my house the number were: nice shades (that open and close electrically): 7K, AC unit that also functions as heater in winter allowed the central heater to remain off foor all but 2 days this winter: 1800 (including installation). I used to hate AC's, and kinda still do hate the how they look. But I am pretty happy so sit in a 25 deg living room when it is 35 outside. And the AC runs on my own solar, I have plenty anyways

    • zarzavat 7 hours ago

      An AC unit essentially requires just a small hole in the wall and a bracket to hold the compressor unit. Europeans have walls don't they? I'm European and I have a wall that could host an AC unit. The barrier is regulatory not engineering.

      • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

        Is this actually illegal in many places? I proposed this to my parents in Germany and they seemed to be under the impression that they could install one but their village is getting a village-wide heat pump system this fall that can also cool in summer, so they are just sitting this summer out as is.

        • crote 6 hours ago

          I highly doubt there are many (if any) places with "installing any kind of AC is illegal" laws.

          On the other hand, there are plenty of noise-related laws preventing you from installing an AC loud enough to be a nuisance for your neighbors. But that's solved by getting one with proper sound isolation, or placing it in such a way that the noise doesn't travel to the neighboring properties.

          Similarly, you aren't allowed to install an AC on the facade of a protected historical building. But that can be solved by installing it on the rear of the building (where it is invisible), or by placing the unit itself indoors and using hidden air vents.

          There's also the issue of landlords and HoAs banning you from making modifications, but that's not really a matter of legality.

          • CalRobert 5 hours ago

            Grumpy old German and Dutch boomers whine if the AC isn’t literally inaudible. Modern ones are very quiet but will still get complaints.

          • PeterStuer 5 hours ago

            In plenty of rental accomodation you are not even allowed to put a nail in the wall to hang a picture from.

            • Semaphor 4 hours ago

              I don't think forbidding that is legal in Germany

              • mschild 3 hours ago

                Its not.

                But making a hole in the wall to the outside is. That would generally be considered a permanent change and requires approval from landlord and in case the apartment building has multiple owners, approval from those as well

          • CalRobert 4 hours ago

            The rules in NL at least are 45dB during hte day, 40dB at night, at property line.

            Our machine in "silent" mode is around 42dB ~60cm from the unit, and we can get it to 40dB with a little distnace from property line and a sound barrier between it and the neighbour. It really is _shockingly_ quiet compared to the dull roar of AC that was ubiquitous to me growing up in central California. (40 dB is "faint" or "computer/babbling brook according to https://soundproofingguide.com/decibels-level-comparison-cha... ) Neighbours still whine about it though. I think they dislike A/C on principle, though.

      • crote 6 hours ago

        By all means install an AC unit to deal with the worst of it. Just install shades as well when you've got the scaffolding out so you can install a smaller, cheaper, and less energy-hungry one.

        Unfortunately I personally live in a highrise, and in a rental unit, so that "small hole and a bracket" definitely isn't an option for everyone.

        • asdff 5 hours ago

          If you can open a window at all you can run a portable AC unit. Even just 3-4 inches is enough.

          • simplyinfinity 4 hours ago

            European windows open sideways not up and down. So we can't just stick an ac unit on the window.

            • tpm 1 hour ago

              Yes you can (I've got one), there are various window seals to adapt to that or you can dyi too. The noise etc make it a temporary solution at best but it's possible.

          • Arodex 3 hours ago

            That's a perfectly good way to waste kW of energy every day and make the heat outside worse.

            • CalRobert 1 hour ago

              It may waste energy, but if so, it's wasting y kwh of energy per day (or joules), at a probably-variably rate of x kw, where y is x * 24 (for kwh)

          • preisschild 1 hour ago

            You'd have to have your windows open at all times with only a thin fabric blocking the opening to do that with most european windows. And then you still have your compressor inside generating heat.

      • preisschild 1 hour ago

        Not an engineering problem, but installing a good (not the mobile AC with the flimsy fabric window seal) AC is not easy in a lot of cases. You need the OK from your landlord and since you mount something on the exterior you also need the OK of many neighbors.

      • tpm 1 hour ago

        You also need an electric wire/fuse with a certain capacity and not every house has that, esp. when it's old, they cook and heat with gas; worse if the cabling etc. up to the property has to be updated too. And this might sound trivial but if it's a block of flats and every flat installs at least one AC unit all of this adds up to huge additional demand which is far far more than a small hole.

    • CalRobert 6 hours ago

      Even now planners are forcing people to build horrible ovens that make no accounting for heat. The planners in Ireland laughed when I talked about over heating in our self built house due to lack of eaves.

      • asdff 5 hours ago

        People don't value design that cools. Most all the spanish style houses you see in California, if you go back to photos from when they were built in the 1920s they all had awnings over all the windows. Those awnings are basically extinct now. Some people are even painting their buildings dark colors. They will chop down shade trees too in a quest for "natural light" aka heat they are now mitigating with a noisy central AC the whole neighborhood gets to listen to now. No one understands cross breeze and opening windows either. Just run up the AC.

        • CalRobert 5 hours ago

          True, though the places I lived in California (Sacramento, San Luis Obispo in particular) all had eaves. Covered patios were common too.

          • asdff 4 hours ago

            I feel eaves are more to keep the drip line from rain from hitting the foundation than for any heat abatement. Typical spanish style roof will not have anything on the side that isn't sloping for example. Just sort of ends flush with the wall. Some don't have any eaves at all really.

            • CalRobert 4 hours ago

              Strange then then places with lots of rain and wind (Ireland, Netherlands come to mind) hate eaves. I guess it keeps builders in business.

              Ironically when I had a 200 year old thatched cottage it had 'eaves' by virtue of the thatch extending almost a meter from the wall. It had built up slowly over centuries of rethatching.

              My experience is mostly with Californian houses that definitely had eaves.

      • pseudohadamard 5 hours ago

        Being done here too (not Ireland): Right now, councils are approving, and builders are building, apartments/houses that are big square boxes with no eaves or shading, black synthetic cladding, and windows with safety stays that only allow them to open about 8cm so almost no cooling possible. The upper floors of these units are essentially uninhabitable during summer.

        • CalRobert 4 hours ago

          I really think Irish planners are climate change deniers. The ones in Offaly at least certainly didn't take it seriously ca. 2020.

    • tgsovlerkhgsel 5 hours ago

      How do you suggest to keep buildings livable during the decades that it takes to (as you suggest) essentially rebuild cities?

      • radishingr 5 hours ago

        By switching from burning Russian hydrocarbons for heat to heat pumps so you can heat and cool while being more efficient? This isn't a rebuild, it is a moderate adaptation to the actual requirements to live in the Europe of today.

        For steam based heat systems there is also cooling options, so that is a fix for those cities with central heat service.

        • adrianN 4 hours ago

          Cooling buildings with air-water heat pumps like you would use to replace an oil or gas furnace doesn't work very well.

          • CalRobert 3 hours ago

            Yes, which is why we should stop installing them and use air to air heat pumps instead, which do both.

            Bonus - you can throw your bulky, ugly radiators out too!

            • tpm 1 hour ago

              They are noisy though and many people including me would hate air heating, my airways suffer enough already.

              • CalRobert 1 hour ago

                the interior units are very quiet in my experience...

                What's wrong with heating air? It was the norm in every house I grew up in...

                • tpm 1 hour ago

                  Yeah, the outdoor units are quite often not quiet. Which matters with houses on small plots very close to each other. For that reason a water-water (earth-water) heat pump would be preferable as that's much more quiet but also much more expensive.

                  My nose simply doesn't work with it, I get an allergy-like reaction that never stops (non-allergic rhinitis), and my wife has the same issue, and many people I know too.

    • PeterStuer 5 hours ago

      We have had heatwaves in Europe forever. The thing is people were used to adapting to them with shades and night/morning ventilation, and shifting their activities out of the hottest part of the day.

      This somehow seems to be beyond today's population and society. How dare this weather impact my schedule!

      • kharak 4 hours ago

        This is the kind of ignorant comment we thankfully see less and less.

        You can no longer shift your activities when the weather reaches 35C (95f) every day for weeks without noticeably cooling down in the night.

        And even if activity shifting was possible, which again, it is not anymore, the authoritative, fatalistic poverty mindset required to demand that one does not actively cool during hot hours is a European mentality not many other cultures, if any, understand.

      • BoingBoomTschak 3 hours ago

        Thing is that the median person used to be able to own a house with walls of relatively thick stone instead of being forced to live in bug nests designed for energy efficiency (mostly keeping heat, not warding it off) instead of human comfort.

      • secretsatan 2 hours ago

        I’m sorry you think heatwaves now are the same as twenty years ago.

  • inigyou 7 hours ago

    I wonder what the global temperature rise would be right now if everyone in Europe had air conditioning since it was invented. Probably about half a degree hotter - so about two degrees total warming?

    • tonfa 6 hours ago

      Depends on the countries, France has had low carbon electricity for a very long time.

      That said F-gases would have been an issue, EU only recently banned them.

      Also most of Europe truly didn't need AC for a long time, growing up temperature above 30C was exceptional and I didn't even know the term tropical night (nighttime temperature above 20C).

      (Now that places are getting 10+ consecutive days above 30 with peaks close or above 40)

  • jerlam 7 hours ago

    The US is generally much closer to the equator and warmer than Europe, hence air conditioning has been a requirement for much longer.

    https://vividmaps.com/comparing-latitude-of-europe-and-ameri...

    US states like Texas and Florida have no latitude equivalent in Europe. Los Angeles is farther south than all of Spain.

    At the same time, the UK, much of Germany, and Poland are farther north than any state in the US lower 48.

    • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

      And yet, even here in Oregon many of my coworkers only got window AC units during a heat wave a few years ago. But let's not break the narrative of all US vs all of Europe.

  • croes 7 hours ago

    Do you think there is a correlation between air conditioning and climate change denial?

    • tmnvix 6 hours ago

      I wouldn't be surprised.

      There are people who think it's a good idea to aircondition service station forecourts. I find the irony of the situation tragically absurd. There's a little of that in the comment you are responding to.

  • wahnfrieden 7 hours ago

    Are you echoing rants from Levels? He has a point but the death rate stats he posts comparing US to EU are bogus, incomparable measures. These places record heat related deaths differently which accounts for a large part of the difference. If you have better sources on this than he does, please share.

    • ajmurmann 6 hours ago

      I thought the Europe number was even just excess deaths and not recorded hear deaths at all whereas the US number was only officially recorded heat deaths.

  • vixen99 7 hours ago

    In the UK and other European locations maybe this is related to some of the highest electricity costs in the world.

  • seydor 7 hours ago

    Greece is full of air conditioners

    Dont take pieter levels so seriously

  • ed_balls 6 hours ago

    >resistance to air conditioning

    Where is this meme coming from? I'm in Poland atm. Half of my neighbours have aircon. I dont just because I'm on the ground floor and the max temp is 25.5C Every new apartament building is build with holes ready for AC.

  • CalRobert 6 hours ago

    The most bizarre thing to me is that here in the Netherlands I can get a subsidy for a heat pump if it heats radiators, but not if it’s a multi split air to air heat pump. Because the latter also happens to be an air conditioner. It makes no sense.

    And then the same people who moralise air conditioning will burn tons of gas all winter for heat.

    Oh, and sensible design choices like eaves that block light from windows in summer are blocked by planners in many cases, bizarrely. The houses are brick ovens.

    Anyway I got AC installed here in Utrecht last week, really enjoying it

    • apexalpha 3 hours ago

      Look at the SPOT prices tonight and you'll understand the resistance to subsidizing airconditioning.

      • CalRobert 3 hours ago

        Fair - good reason to use solar and batteries too.

        The cynical side of me almost wonders if the current approach is designed to reduce health care and pension costs by disincentivizing installation of a technology that saves elderly people.

  • eecc 6 hours ago

    Well, until recently Greece was struck by a savage “restructuring” and “reforms” package that left people without pensions or even chemotherapy when in need. I don’t think aircon is the priority for many of them

  • rippeltippel 6 hours ago

    US citizens don’t get scolded enough for having elected (twice!) a president who denies human-induced global warming.

    AC would not be so much needed if we started reducing pollution and greenhouse gases.

    • omnimus 5 hours ago

      There is no climate change in America. They have AC.

  • traxler 6 hours ago

    Genuine question: Do we have data that collaborates the theory that AC's prevent heat deaths and it's not due to confounding variables like the air in Nevada being dryer (dry heat is more bearable than wet heat) or the people in Nevada having year round higher temperatures and just being more acclimated?

    Has been on my "to research" list for a while. I agree with you that Europeans should stop being so stingy with AC (speaking as an European who still hasn't an AC, but not much longer), but I do wonder how much they actually do to prevent heat deaths.

    Because, how many heat deaths happen at home where people would potentially have AC? As far as I can tell (pre researching it) most, if not all, heat deaths I am aware of, happen outside. So the question would be: What is the effect of having a cool 22C home in regards to suffering heat deaths outside. Does it make it better, because your body can cool down? Does it maybe make it worse, because you step into a harsh difference when leaving it? (The last one is probably an easy no, since plenty of countries with high AC rate don't seem to have that issue).

    (Or just general damages from heat, not just heat deaths)

    • omnimus 6 hours ago

      Exactly. The recent heat deaths I saw were people getting heart attack from jumping into cold river and others mostly from dehydration. All are from outside.

      You will not die from sleeping in 30c. What europe will have to get used to is slow down over the mid day when the heat is worst.

      • jerlam 5 hours ago

        You're describing a siesta, which is from Southern Europe (among other places).

      • barrenko 5 hours ago

        Night temperatures over 25°c are extremely dangerous for health if continous, there's no getting around this, just get the damn ACs. In my country, we've always had "siestas", now we have ACs too.

        • omnimus 4 hours ago

          I am sure people who can get AC already have it or are working on it.

  • oatmeal1 6 hours ago

    Heat related deaths predominantly kill the elderly. That may save lives overall because of their voting behavior leading to more deaths.

  • nikanj 6 hours ago

    ”Hey so all your animals and crops are dying, but if you just install AC and stop going outdoors this whole thing can be ignored”

  • sideway 5 hours ago

    Nowadays, it's usually not the lack of aircons that is a problem in greek households. Compared to local wages, energy prices have risen so much that lots of people cannot afford to keep their aircons on.

    • asdff 5 hours ago

      How are public spaces in greece? Any large "free" sources of AC? Homeless in the US sometimes use this method to avoid severe heat exposure, hanging out in say a mall, public library, airport bag claim, staying underground in the subway system, or riding an air conditioned bus around.

      • sideway 2 hours ago

        If I had to make an educated guess, I'd say Greece doesn't think about these types of public spaces as much as other countries do and the ones that do exist are probably a bit hostile towards the homeless.

  • lmc 5 hours ago

    We don't like it either, but thanks for being a sanctimonious prick about it.

  • Balinares 5 hours ago

    Burning even more energy in response to the consequence of burning too much energy is seen by some as counterproductive.

    Do also note that AIUI in the US only deaths that were officially ruled from heat are counted as such by the CDC (source: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/23/us/extreme-heat-deaths.ht...), whereas the EU usually performs estimates based on overall deaths in excess of the expected baseline. So it's not apples to apples.

    I do agree that avoidable deaths should be avoided, though, so I'm with you on that.

  • baxtr 4 hours ago

    I think it’s a bit ignorant to lump Europe into one.

    Europe has roughly 750 mn people. When you’re in the southern parts many homes actually do have AC.

    We’re not stupid. Many new buildings have ACs. The northern parts just haven’t adapted to the increased temperatures at scale yet.

  • toasty228 4 hours ago

    The irony is that if we never invented AC climate change wouldn't be as bad since half of the US, middle east and Asia would still be mostly unusable

  • 8fingerlouie 4 hours ago

    It's not resistance to air conditioning as much as there isn't really a need for it for most of the year.

    Some of that has to do with engineering and age / history. Many older building in the southern part of Europe are built to cope with heat, at least "normal heat", and have done so very well for centuries. In places like Spain and Italy, society has adapted around the worst heat by means of Siestas.

    In Northern Europe, there are maybe (during "normal summers) 7-14 days in a year with heat waves, and long dark winters with freezing temperatures so large windows are not uncommon. Houses there are built to trap heat (and cold) with insulation, with current building codes mandating around 350mm (~13.5") of insulation.

    I have and old (1970s) house with 100mm insulation in the walls and 200mm insulation in the roof, and that house heats up in the sun. I also have a 2014 "modern" house built to regulations at the time, so around 300mm insulation, and despite a full day of sun, 30C, that house doesn't heat up nearly as much. Insulation by itself obviously doesn't protect you from prolonged high ambient temperatures, and I do have a portable AC for those situations. I think I've used it for 10 days in total over 2 years. Most days, simply opening windows and doors are enough to cool down the house. Having roof windows creates a "chimney effect" letting the hot air out on top, drawing relatively cooler air from closer to the ground.

    I also have an older summerhouse (1984), constructed with wood inside and outside, 75mm insulation in walls, 100mm in the roof, and that has a proper mini split aircon unit, Panasonic NZ25VKE, and in the 5 years I've had it installed, it has used 4.75 kWh on cooling. For comparison it uses around 1400 kWh yearly on heating. The wooden construction doesn't trap heat like bricks/concrete does, so even on very hot days simply opening a couple of windows/doors is generally enough to get the heat out, as well as putting the heat pump on "only fans" mode.

    And finally, a lot of newer buildings (2010 and onwards) does have climate control, both heating and cooling, but Europe is an old continent, and the buildings are old as well. It's not uncommon to see 200 year old buildings still in use today. 100 year old buildings are quite common. The church in the town I live in was built between 1250 and 1595. It has of course been updated with electricity and other modern commodities, but no air conditioning. The meter thick granite walls keeps it nice and cool.

    Ironically, the US' insistence on running on electricity powered by coal, oil and gas is contributing to global warming making the problem worse, emitting about 2-3x as much CO2 as Europe on electricity (https://app.electricitymaps.com/map/live/fifteen_minutes), making the need for AC greater. If anything, the Americans don't get scolded enough for their resistance to renewable energy sources.

  • europoorean 3 hours ago

    A quick google shows Greece has a life expectancy ~83 years, while Nevada's is at ~76. A 7 year difference.

    Heat death affects disproportionately those of old age. Everyone dying at 76 for other reasons is not going to die at 83 due to heat.

    While it is true that Europeans don't have air conditioning at home for the most part, it's also true that those old Europeans that die during heatwaves would already have been dead in the USA. I am 99% confident that 98% of the difference in heat deaths can be explained in this way at the 95% CL (!)

    Gun related deaths are simply a way for Americans to cope, I suppose! A bit of ragebait. I honestly hope you fix your health system.

  • secretsatan 2 hours ago

    Excuse me, it used to be livable here without aircon, you lot need to stop driving suv and reviving coal

  • Imbryk 1 hour ago

    Nearly all of Nevada's heat deaths are recorded in Las Vegas, so are you saying Americans cannot built proper system in a single town?

    What a pathetic

  • cuvert 54 minutes ago

    But wouldn't be better if people would invest in better home insulation and ventilation? It would help in the winter also. I say this because since the early 90s, my father installed air conditioning in our home, but in 2020 the building was redone (the building is from 1986), and whenever I return home in the summer, I don't need air conditioning. Just lower the roller blinds and open the windows after the sun passed.

kiriberty 11 hours ago

So calling for the conference and cancelling it raises awareness of extreme heat? Well played

kochikame 8 hours ago

Unlike all of the things referenced in the Alanis Morrisette song, this is actually ironic

  • ndsipa_pomu 43 minutes ago

    However, by calling her song "Ironic" when it doesn't discuss actual irony is itself ironic.

westurner 10 hours ago

Recently - from YT recommended - I learned about Glauber's salt (sodium sulfate).

Glauber's salt is a PCM phase-change material that melts at 90F / 32.4C and starts absorbing thermal energy.

zombot 3 hours ago

There is a certain irony to a conference about extreme heat getting canceled because of extreme heat.

indigodaddy 10 hours ago

Apparently, NOT a theonion article

deadbabe 7 hours ago

This may be overly simplistic, but if we shut down the AMOC would that help Europe balance out the temps and solve its heat problems?

  • inigyou 7 hours ago

    It'll be -20 Celsius in winter and +40 Celsius in summer and everyone will die in both seasons so yes, no more heat problem when everyone dies.

    • deadbabe 6 hours ago

      -20 Celsius is not that bad in Winter.

      • padjo 6 hours ago

        It is if your ecosystems and built environment aren't adapted to it.

regnull 10 hours ago

It's either terrible planning or the most persuasive presentation they’ve ever given.

  • astrobe_ 5 hours ago

    The title reads "too little, too late" to me.

rasz 11 hours ago

At first I thought it was just virtue signaling. But no, its the venue.

>Venue: LSE Shaw Library, Houghton St, Old Building, London

https://halls.lse.ac.uk/story/25006031/deal-with-the-uk-weat...

> LSE halls (like most houses in the country) don't have air conditioning, it can be quite suffocating.

I blame LSE. Uni should provide safe and comfortable environment for students.

  • SecretDreams 11 hours ago

    Uni is just preparing the students for the realities of the real world =[

  • ceejayoz 11 hours ago

    > At first I thought it was just virtue signaling.

    Maybe examine the reflex to dismiss out of hand without evidence?

  • inigyou 7 hours ago

    Everyone should provide a safe and comfortable planet for everyone. Instead we said this is fine, as we literally set ourselves on fire, and then literally melted our faces off