Europe Needs to Face the Heat

The recent heat wave is a wake-up call that might have come too late

Elad Simchayoff
6 min readJul 21, 2022
Photo by George Chandrinos on Unsplash

Even those with regular drastic mood swings will acknowledge how unusual the following scene is. As I’m writing these words, the unprecedented heatwave that only hours ago led Britain to an all-time record-breaking 40.2C (104.3F) has been replaced by pouring rain. Rain! Classical-European-biblical-feet-drenching rain.

As the weather is now more accommodating - if you will allow me - I want to take you for a little stroll through several months of July in recent years in Britain. Our first stop is July 25th, 2019. At Cambridge Botanic Garden a new record-breaking temperature was measured, 38.7C (101.6F). Beyond the obvious drops of sweat, I presume that a certain level of excitement could have been detected on the faces of those witnessing the historic event. The previous record of 38.5C (101.3F) was set 16 years prior, in August 2003.

One year later, in July 2020, research done by the British Met office concluded that the likelihood of a 40C temperature in the UK is “rapidly accelerating”. according to them, an event of 40C in the UK could happen “every few years in the climate of 2100” — meaning, 80 years from now. The following year, in July 2021, scientists predicted that the UK could see the first-ever 40C day within 10…

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Elad Simchayoff

I love writing about what I love. Israeli/British. Father, husband, dog person. Support me by joining Medium via this link: https://eladsi.medium.com/membership