Temperatures reach 46C in Spain as Europe heatwave continues (www.bbc.com)
from babysandpiper@sopuli.xyz to world@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 01:03
https://sopuli.xyz/post/29644735

A heatwave continues to grip large parts of Europe, with authorities in many countries issuing health warnings amid searing temperatures.

Southern Spain is the worst-affected region, with temperatures in the mid-40s Celsius recorded in Seville and neighbouring areas.

A new heat record for June of 46C was set on Saturday in the town of El Granado, according to Spain’s national weather service, which also said this month is on track to be the hottest June on record.

#world

threaded - newest

Puddinghelmet@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 01:09 next collapse

Nice n cozy

ijedi1234@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 01:35 next collapse

46 is a bit nippy. Might need a jacket.

Puddinghelmet@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 01:36 collapse

WHO touched the thermostat this time geeez you??

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 06:05 collapse

Toasty enough for Jeff Bezos.

InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 01:41 next collapse

I’m having a cool low 30s C something summer in Tx.

protist@mander.xyz on 30 Jun 02:03 next collapse

We still have all of July, August and September and most of October to go…

InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 02:09 collapse

And December.

IAmNorRealTakeYourMeds@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 02:46 next collapse

same, and my apartment complex is refusing to fix the AC.

Quadhammer@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 03:30 next collapse

86 in Texas right now? I’m calling bs

reddig33@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 04:54 collapse

I’m not. Today in Austin was “feels like 110 degrees Fahrenheit” according to the weather app.

rauls5@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 01:54 next collapse

114 in ‘merican

AlphaOmega@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 03:14 next collapse

If anyone is interested, it’s X Celsius times 9/5 + 32

Quadhammer@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 03:28 next collapse

C * dolly Parton + freezing temp in F

Botzo@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 03:56 next collapse
Szyler@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 08:30 next collapse

What is the mneminic for freezing temp in F for non-freedom people trying to help the freedom people by converting?

AlphaOmega@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 21:40 collapse

That’s how I remember it!

addie@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 11:36 collapse

“Double it and add thirty” is accurate enough for ambient temperatures, and easier to do in your head. If you need scientific accuracy then you wouldn’t be using Fahrenheit anyway.

GiuseppeAndTheYeti@midwest.social on 30 Jun 11:57 collapse

Maybe? But 122 is way different than 114 in this case.

jawa22@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Jun 12:04 next collapse

Most places in Europe have hit normal summer temperatures where I am (about 35). This is ridiculous, though. It is hotter in Spain right now than it is in Phoenix.

Let that sink in. It is hotter in Barcelona than it is in Death Valley right now.

massive_bereavement@fedia.io on 30 Jun 14:29 collapse

I would right out melt getting out of the plane.

TheBat@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 03:10 next collapse

Muy cocida

lemmie689@lemmy.sdf.org on 30 Jun 03:13 next collapse

It’ll help keep the tourists away.

altphoto@lemmy.today on 30 Jun 03:21 next collapse

Seattle area is pretty warm today.

We have AC, however, bless their hearts, the people who built our house put the only vents on the floor. When its cold you get warm air at the bottom of the house, which is probably OK, but the AC unit pulls air also at the bottom… Which is also OK for heating. Now think cooling for a sec. Pull the cold air from the bottom where the air is cold and then blow it at the bottom where its still cold.

drmoose@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 04:14 next collapse

Was just talking with my friend from Latvia who said it has been the coldest end of June since forever. Climate is so fucked and its just the beginning.

IsoKiero@sopuli.xyz on 30 Jun 07:37 collapse

Here in Finland we just might hit +20C this week. Maybe a bit over that in the south. Maybe not coldest since forever, but definetly colder than last couple of summers so far.

Etterra@discuss.online on 30 Jun 05:35 next collapse

As this keeps happening I continue to wonder when Europe and the UK will finally realize how badly they need to air conditioning. The units are (or were in the past year or 3)b way more expensive there than here in America. I dunno about current costs. It’s worth it though, even if you only need it for like 1 month out of the year.

Bashnagdul@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 05:47 next collapse

Ik Dutch, and have airco in every room in the house that isnt a bathroom or toilet. It’s awesome. Also have 30+ solar panels so whenever I use the airco, it’s run on solar power.

Renohren@lemmy.today on 30 Jun 05:50 next collapse

In France the government is helping people get Aircon by subsidising heatpumps, also way more carbon efficient than Gaz or fioul based central heating.

BastingChemina@slrpnk.net on 30 Jun 07:26 next collapse

It depends on the kind of heatpumps, in a lot of cases the heatpump is installed to replace a boiler, reusing the radiators and hot water circulation already available.

Unfortunately in this case the heatpump cannot be used as AC.

SpongyAneurysm@feddit.org on 30 Jun 10:44 collapse

Not as AC, but a reversible heat pump can use the heating system for cold water circulation.

It’s rather limited, because you run into condensation concerns, but it’s still a possibility. A place I used to work at did this. It wasn’t perfect, but took some of the edge off.

BastingChemina@slrpnk.net on 30 Jun 12:00 next collapse

On the other hand reversible heatpumps work great with floor heating.

Having a cool floor during a heatwave is amazing, plus no noise,

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 12:18 collapse

Does that work for ground source heat pumps too? Like could I literally cool my floor with one? For summer and light winter, my air to air unit is fine and air to water is great too, but when it’s like -25 or -30 out, the air source units start getting pretty inefficient.

BastingChemina@slrpnk.net on 02 Jul 12:58 collapse

Probably, it should be quite efficient as well.

Renohren@lemmy.today on 01 Jul 21:38 collapse

Even better: quite a few models allow the installation of an extra module that works as a split water circuit air cooler. So no condensation on radiators but cool air blown from an AC looking thing. Daikin and mitsubishi has such models (from memory).

Akasazh@feddit.nl on 30 Jun 09:31 collapse

How does this subsidy work? Asking for my dad, who lives in France.

Renohren@lemmy.today on 01 Jul 21:28 collapse

The following webpage does the job of showing you all the available subsidies to get a heat pump fitted to replace a fossil fuel based furnace.

…gouv.fr/…/quelles-aides-pour-linstallation-dune-…

Use your favorite translation tool (or browser native tool) to get it in English.

Globally, you get help in the case of an air to water heat pump and not an Air to Air ones BUT, technically, on quite a few models, you can add , for a small price) an extra circuit that works as a water based split air cooler (so not proper AC, but damn quite close to it).

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 06:09 next collapse

I wonder what’s the cost for them to install one. I got mine installed and it cost around €350(rm1600 in my currency), everything included, for a japanese brand(Daikin). shouldn’t be too horribly expensive for european country, especially when people started to adopt it.

Edit: but honestly, i wonder how well aircond would work in 40°c+ temperature, it relies on pumping heat away from the room, and if outside is so hot it wouldn’t able to effectively cool the refrigerant. Still better than nothing.

ToastedRavioli@midwest.social on 30 Jun 06:59 collapse

Air conditioning works just like a refrigerator in that the cooling is accomplished by the compression and decompression of gas. The outside temperature has no effect on the ability of the unit to cool the inside space. Air conditioning just vents to outside, it doesnt use outside air. The same is true for a window unit as it is for a central system

Aspergillus@pawb.social on 30 Jun 08:01 collapse

to a point. It still relies on radiating the heat produced at the compression stage outside to the outside air. Due to how thermodynamics work this becomes less efficient or even impossible once the outside air approaches the same temperature as the compressed gas. Once the gas can’t cool down after the compressing step the ac starts to lose effectiveness fast

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 10:28 collapse

Bingo!

Nighed@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 06:24 next collapse

They are trying to push people to heat pumps (basically air conditioners tech wise)

They are also moving towards building/efficiency regs that require completely sealed houses and forced air systems in new builds.

So new houses will effectively be required/encouraged to have an air con capable houses.

The old housing stock though? Oof. I’m on a private estate that even bans that kind of stuff!

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 09:18 collapse

You can get a grant to install heat pumps, but ONLY if they can’t be reversed and used as air conditioning.

Also, I’m keeping my combi-boiler until they literally stop pumping gas to homes. Fuck water tanks.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 09:37 collapse

I guess that’s to stop people from using it to get air-con when it’s mean to help people move away from gas. A bit silly though.

…I suspect there are a few models that only need 1 part switched for it to be possible…

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 12:16 collapse

Looking further into it, the “heat pumps” we’ve been pushing seem just for the ones that heat water, and then pump that round your radiators/out your taps.

The exclusion is for anything that moves air.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 13:41 collapse

Do you have a link for the exclusion bit?

Blackmist@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 14:07 collapse

I think this is the official bit.

www.gov.uk/…/what-you-can-get

It must replace an existing fossil fuel system, and you can’t be left with a hybrid system (e.g. heat source plus boiler)

Meaning it must heat water somewhere, using the heat pump. Can you even get a system that heats water and air? And would that be included in this scheme? Some guy on reddit says they’re excluded, he may be full of shit.

I’m assuming there’s a much more detailed guide than this for installers, full of technical jargon about what is and isn’t included, but I can’t find that.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 14:16 collapse

You cannot get a grant for a hybrid heat pump system (for example a combination of gas boiler and air source heat pump).

I think it just requires you to have a heat pump for all your water and heating. There appears to be pumps that do both, (mentioned in this article) but that’s more research than I can get away with while ‘working’.

pathief@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 08:06 next collapse

My living room is around 36 square meters and the cheapest AC unit for that area was 650 - 850 euros. You also have to pay a certified company to install it, which cost another 200 - 300 euros.

The median salary is like 900 euros, which makes it out of reach for a large portion of the population.

Tja@programming.dev on 30 Jun 08:29 collapse

Is the median living room 36 square meters? Seems unfair to compare median salary with a rather big house/apartment.

Growing up our dining/living room was 24m2 and I could be cooled with a 200 euro portable AC.

pathief@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 09:05 collapse

Fair point.

We also have a 20 square meter study where we installed AC. The unit cost around 550 euros and installation was like 70 euros cheaper. Total cost was cheaper but still hard for a median family to support.

Most families use some sort of fan or cooling column but they are quite lackluster and only work in summer.

Saleh@feddit.org on 30 Jun 08:13 next collapse

For new buildings that is already case. For older buildings there is limits to how well you can retrofit them with new heating/cooling/insulation systems. Lots of building are messed up, because changes to insulation and heating/cooling lead to humidity and mold or worse mushrooms.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 08:33 next collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 09:14 next collapse

You’re using a phone, which not only uses energy and petrochemicals to make but sometimes even slave labor.

We’re doomed because of idiots like you lmao. How does it feel knowing you’re responsible for the end of humanity?

[deleted] on 30 Jun 09:18 collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 09:30 collapse
  1. You’re the guy in the well. That’s why I quoted you.

And 2:

•I also used a second hand phone until it couldn’t be repaired anymore.

•I avoid taking planes but very rarely, maybe every 4-5 years take one because even by plane my family lives about 20 hours away, since people still want me to visit them, which I’m getting the feeling might not be your case.

•Don’t drive, don’t even have the train or electric bus much, since I can walk/bike most everywhere I need.

•Don’t have A/C

•I live in Finland

•This whole posting and thread is about Spain, not the USA, so presumably most people talking about installing an A/C are in Spain or the EU, which makes sense since it seems nearly all of the USA has A/C already.

  1. Since you’re keen on purity tests, even the potential detriment of people’s health, it’s fair to call out your hypocrisy. You probably still have polyester clothes, use plastics of some sort, have a computer, etc. Hence why you’re the guy in the well. To the point I was going to use that comic as my original post.

Then again, you’re a baby account made today meaning you’ve probably already been banned somewhere multiple times before for simply being an unlikeable asshole and this is a new alt for you.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 09:32 next collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 09:42 collapse

I should add a point 4:

You’re a privileged commentariat who lives somewhere that hasn’t been hit so hard by climate change yet to the point where A/C is needed for health reasons, and you lack the self awareness to know of that. That’s why you’re the person in the well.

You didn’t offer the person who needs A/C a better solution, like a heat pump; you didn’t ask if they use renewable energy (I don’t know of Spain but here in Finland we can pick what energy company we use, and me and my wife have one that is 100% renewable/nuclear); you assumed they weren’t from the EU.

That’s why you’re the person in the well. You never offered or discussed potential ways to improve things, or even if they need the A/C; you merely criticized someone who exists in society for partaking in society ie trying to survive the heat waves.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 09:44 next collapse

What person who need AC you fucking idiot? I was talking to you and you live in Finland.

Unlock your sphincter bro you’re all tensed

Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:06 collapse

You were talking about Eterra originally. I apologize, didn’t realize you had memory health issues as well.

Clearly not talking to me since I don’t have, or need, A/C. Since you may be geographically challenged, Finland is very very far north.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 10:13 collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:21 collapse

Gee, I wonder why you were banned before lol.

I really wonder what level of self hate you must have to be this much of an asshole. And that’s coming from someone who was already almost killed by racists twice. I’m not surprised you’re yet another person itching to kill a minority from an originally poor background.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 09:46 collapse

Lmao the american dude living in Finland and taking his 20 hours planes is calling me privileged.

You’re a first world idiot that cannot comprehend anything but burning more juice to solve all your problem

Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:04 collapse

I grew up in El Salvador until I had to go to school, and then summers were in El Salvador. We traveled by bus. That is until the gang wars got too dangerous. My parents are from El Salvador and had to leave because of the civil war that the USA meddled in because the revolutionaries were “scary socialists”. At home we only spoke Spanish, and watched and listened to Spanish media like Univision and Sábado Gigante.

Español es mi primer lenguaje, that’s why the second half of my username is in Spanish (sal is salt in Spanish, lumi is snow in Finnish).

Growing up in poverty, most of my life without A/C, and from a time when plastic wasn’t as common because I’m older, and tech was expensive and uncommon, I’m pretty sure my life time pollution output has been lower than yours, too.

I’ve taken that long travel journey of Finland / USA only twice, once to move here, and the second time because I have family that actually cares about me to the point they bought my plane tickets that second time. I’m sorry you don’t know that feeling.

But go on, do keep speaking, letting any doubt about you being the fool be removed.

Oh, btw:

You’re a idiot that cannot comprehend anything but burning more juice to solve all your problem

Literally makes you the guy in the well depicted as the asshole no one likes, especially considering there’s literally no other way to visit family.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 09:33 collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 09:44 collapse

You know without quoting there’s no context right? Just makes you sound a bit mad being this off topic. Especially since the majority of Lemmy is against the Palestinian genocide.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 09:47 collapse

They are now it’s trendy.

You think I forgot how it was in the worst days of the genocide?

Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:08 collapse

Do tell, less than 1 day old Lemmy account.

Nighed@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 09:41 next collapse

If it’s green energy it’s not really a huge problem.

Put some solar panels up too and you’re golden.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 09:43 collapse

Ah yes green energies are gonna save us.

Anything but do away from the idea that we can just burn more juice to solve every of our problem innit?

Cobrachicken@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 13:07 collapse

Wow, joined 5 hours ago, already half the comments removed, and the rest full of hatespeech. Go outside, drink a beer or sth and calm down, bot.

Lumisal@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 15:44 next collapse

You bring up a good point.

After reading some of the stuff Russia has pulled off (like the fake green protestors slashing tires in the UK that were found out to be Russians part of a wider disinfo campaign), I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re actually one of those false actors created to keep left wing politics and policy unpopular.

If not, they’re certainly carrying the water for them completely.

[deleted] on 01 Jul 07:35 collapse
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[deleted] on 01 Jul 07:35 collapse
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Lumisal@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 11:53 collapse

Oh hey it’s the racist previously named Germanixx, with a fresh alt.

This xkcd comic is US centered, but I think it still applies here:

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/3c54401b-98ab-466d-8422-58d4bf437c87.png">

[deleted] on 01 Jul 12:19 next collapse
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Cobrachicken@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 12:22 collapse

The last two panels :-)

psx_crab@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 10:32 collapse

And your suggestion is let them roast?

MrLuigi002@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 08:59 next collapse

I live in Spain, and since temperatures are now reaching 39°C in my area, I ordered two AC units for the most used rooms in my house (living room and bedroom).

With installation it costed 1300€. A months salary basically. In my area the cheapest unit with installation was 450€, but it didn’t look very reliable.

I ordered it 11 days ago, and I’m scheduled to receive it and installed either this week or the next. AC installers are oversaturated with orders this time of the year. It’s insane.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 12:16 collapse

I live in Estonia, temperatures don’t ever get to 39C but they do get up to 33-34 and for some reason my house gets pretty humid even at high temps, so it’s worse inside than outside, even if it’s hotter outside. I got a heat pump installed about 2 years ago, cost around 2k installed, but then again I went for a beefy Mitsubishi unit (big house and only one unit for now). It’s an absolute game changer in the summer, and in the winter when it gets cold, it saves me effort as well - I have to load the furnace less.

I figure it’s already earned its keep via the heating, but also if I do 2 extra hours of productive work 2 days a week, that’s 10 weeks of summertime heat till it’s paid off in full and while most summers don’t come with 10 weeks of heat, every summer has at least 4-5 hot weeks here.

remon@ani.social on 30 Jun 09:19 next collapse

Europe and the UK

You can just say Europe.

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:54 collapse

Nope, UK is not part of Europe anymore ;)

lmagitem@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 11:42 next collapse

The EU isn’t Europe.

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 11:45 collapse

That was the joke.

polderprutser@feddit.nl on 30 Jun 12:08 next collapse

Do you mean no longer part of the EU? Because for as far as I know the island is still geographically in Europe lol.

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 12:21 collapse

Debatable. They are an island next to Europe. But apart from that, you just stumbled across the joke.

breecher@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jul 08:25 collapse

It most definitely is ;)

brewery@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 10:20 next collapse

We’re very aware in the UK but it’s not too easy. We have some the oldest housing stock in the world. We don’t have central air with no real way to retrofit so it would have to be one room at a time. Our windows aren’t designed to house those units I see in NY. We have to rely on very inefficient portable units so I only use it on the really hot days. Energy prices are still high after Russia’s invasion. People are adding proper units when extending but only the rich can really afford that.

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:54 next collapse

Add to that, that all these old UK houses have about as much insulation as a cereal box.

elucubra@sopuli.xyz on 30 Jun 15:37 next collapse

Split heat pumps are very common in Southern Europe. Modern units have insane efficiency, in the order of 4 units of heat or cold per unit of energy expended, and can be installed almost anywhere, in contrast to central units. The only downside is that they don’t provide hot water.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 12:10 collapse

For detached houses, you can do split systems with multiple indoor units per one outdoor unit. In a flat, you’re a bit more fucked because you might need permission from other people in the building, etc.

freebee@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 11:55 next collapse

Why would they need more airco when many houses and apartments still don’t even have proper shutters for windows and many people still don’t know you should keep your windows closed during peak heat hours, many roofs still barely insulated and they turned all their yards and driveways into concrete and asphalt hellscapes. A nice adult tree in your yard does more than an airco, fight me.

Bo7a@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 12:34 next collapse

Overall, I completely agree with this comment. But I live in the middle of the forest, completely surrounded by trees and when it hits 35c that air conditioning is very needed. Trees are nice but an air conditioner they are not.

Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 Jun 12:47 next collapse

There’s a huge difference in that between the UK and countries further to the south: for example, pretty much all dwellings in Portugal have outside window shutters whilst in the UK it’s incredibly rare (instead they have inside heavy courtains, so the light goes into the house and the INSIDE gets absorbed by transformed into heat by the courtains) but on the other hand housing insulation is generaly complete total crap in Portugal, but less so in the UK (still not at Scandinavia or Russian levels of efficiency, but way better than Portugal) so in Winter unless one uses massive amounts of electricity/gas for heating, it’s literally colder indoors in Portugal than in Britain.

At the very least both Portugal and Spain are much better adapted to higher temperatures than elsewhere in Europe, and that’s anchored on traditional techniques (such as outside window shutters, houses painted in light colors and the type of roofing used) rather than the brute-force energy-heavy techniques (such as heavy use of Aircon) so common in places like the US.

freebee@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 23:04 collapse

Well in places like UK, people are installing AC instead of trying many other, passive cooling options first. They don’t plant a single shrub next to their building but do put in highly inefficient portable AC units meanwhile asphalting/concreting there driveways… That’s exactly what got me on my high horse. AC can be needed, but it’s definitely not the first way to go in a northern-ish European place if the building doesn’t have outside shutters, very non green streets around etc. It’s not the miracle solution, AC adds to climate change, other ways of dealing with heat do not.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 12:34 collapse

I installed triple glazing and started shutting windows during the day, but since there’s little ventilation, that means the air gets really bad here eventually. There’s trees on the south side of the house and no windows on that wall. I’m further north than the majority of the UK (think between Inverness and Shetland for my latitude - except I’m at the Baltic sea).

The AC is just necessary in the last few years. A decade ago it got hot, but not unbearably. Now it’s worse. I think the increased insulation is actually making AC-less, windows-closed situation heat worse since there are no shutters. I do wonder if polarizing film would be an effective alternative, as I don’t want it to be dark 24/7 and I’d forget to re-open the shutters when the summer is over lol

remon@ani.social on 30 Jun 12:49 collapse

Why would they need more airco when many houses and apartments still don’t even have proper shutters for windows and many people still don’t know you should keep your windows closed during peak heat hours

I’m doing all of that have have good insulation, ground floor. Doesn’t help when the temperature never drops below 20°C for a week (and I literally got up at 5:00 when it was coldest to air out my flat).

So yeah, I’m getting an AC this summer.

freebee@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 22:59 collapse

Exactly this, it’s a last resort measure. More important is that every passive cooling option needs to be tried: outside shutters, more big green around the buildins, minimize concrete and asphalt around buildings, closing and airing at best times, etc. Some people just skip all that and go airco, especially in the USA. They are actively adding more BS to the shitstorm that is climate change.

grober_Unfug@discuss.tchncs.de on 30 Jun 15:57 next collapse

How badly we need AC?

How about “how badly we need to get our shit together to stop human caused climate change”?

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 21:00 collapse

It’ll be both, even a very aggressive response will take decades for it to Stop getting hotter then at best it will not get hotter. It will be 4-5 decades at best before it gets cooler.

Methane adds some uncertainty to that though. If you were to stop using gas it might cool off after it disappears in a decade in the atmosphere.

But it will keep getting hotter in every circumstance even if we act aggressively on climate change.

grober_Unfug@discuss.tchncs.de on 01 Jul 05:45 collapse

I’m just so tired of people dealing with the climate change as if it was inevitable, like some karma shit. A lot of people just don’t want to change. They want to keep going like they used to and that’s driving me insane.

PlaidBaron@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 21:45 collapse

Climate change is inevitable. Its already here. It can be mitigated, however. Pretending its avoidable is folly.

Aliktren@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 15:44 collapse

We have it (UK) but its not solving the issue long term , we need titanic change that isnt coming.

Kekzkrieger@feddit.org on 30 Jun 06:05 next collapse

No worries guys this is just a normal summer day climate change isnt real, enjoy the sun

/s in case it isnt clear

Tja@programming.dev on 30 Jun 08:26 next collapse

There is still snow somewhere on earth, everything is fine!

- a politician somewhere

Kekzkrieger@feddit.org on 30 Jun 09:11 collapse

Lets all fly with our private jets to venice for a wedding!

oh also you cant use plastic straws cause its bad for the environment.

Valmond@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 11:37 collapse

Do not Lockerbie them.

I’m joking (don’t kill people) but it’s strange that when I grew up there were people all over the place blowing stuff up because they thought they were wronged. Not so much today, not even blowing up an empty Elon jet for example.

zbyte64@awful.systems on 30 Jun 16:00 next collapse

The new talking point is that man made climate change is real but burning oil isn’t causing the world to warm. But that does mean we can geoengineer our climate to be cooler. 🙃

Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml on 01 Jul 08:48 collapse

“We had a hot summer in 1976 and it wasn’t called climate change then”.

What someone said to me yesterday. He was deadly serious.

RadioFreeArabia@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 07:49 next collapse

Across the Mediterranean to the south and east it is even hotter. Wearing shorts and putting on sunblock isn’t the best way to deal with the heat, you need to shield yourself and make use of the chimney effect.

The Bedouin lesson: A scientific study proves robes are the best garment to wear in the desert heat

Tja@programming.dev on 30 Jun 08:25 next collapse

I prefer using the Boyle Law effect.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 08:30 next collapse

The best way to deal with the heat would be physical retaliation against those because of whom we are in this whole mess

squaresinger@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 10:52 collapse

A Bedouin outfit might not fit socially, but a loose summer dress might work just as well.

So as a counter to the “pants for women” movement, let’s start a “summer dresses for everyone” movement.

Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 11:25 next collapse

Shame I’m a fat old guy now. A few decades back I looked great in a Laura Ashley summer dress.

xav@programming.dev on 30 Jun 12:18 next collapse

You were a pretty young women back then ?

HugeNerd@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 12:26 next collapse

Women is plural.

dangercake@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 14:27 next collapse

He said he was fat already

xav@programming.dev on 03 Jul 04:39 collapse

Oh yes sorry for the typo

TBi@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 12:38 collapse

He combined into one fat guy

TheRealKuni@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 12:55 collapse

It was a Regrettable Incident.

dangercake@feddit.uk on 30 Jun 14:39 collapse

This is why most places have a strict one at a time policy on the big water slides. It’s not worth it girls.

A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 13:54 next collapse

Don’t be silly, I bet your tits are absolutely banging now and would work great in a low cut sundress.

Regrettable_incident@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 14:46 collapse

They’re definitely bigger!

vxx@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 15:42 collapse
Unpigged@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 Jun 23:20 collapse

Just sell it as a modern take on (manliest of manly) Roman and Greek tunics. Alpha bros will be drooling for it in no time. That, however, will ruin the purpose by making the dress unwearable again so nah.

Saleh@feddit.org on 30 Jun 08:16 next collapse

The last years saw up to 50°C in Northern Africa already. This will be the fate of Southern Europe, as the peak temperatures in the center and North of Europe will go to 45°C.

As the mean temperature rises roughly linear, so do the peak temperatures, but at a much faster rate. So 1,5-2°C increase in mean temperature often correspond to 5-7°C increase in peak temperatures.

Aceticon@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 Jun 12:38 collapse

Well, that depends on whether the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation stops working or not as that’s what, for example, means that Lisbon which is roughly at the same latitude as New York has a temperature which is about 5 - 10C higher.

One of the weirdest effect of Global Warming might very well be that the westernmost parts of Europe get colder (though who knows what other side effects the stopping of the AMOC will bring beyond reducing the temperature moderating effects of the Atlantic along the Westernmost coasts of Europe).

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:57 collapse

Famine for ocean animals and more hurricanes in the even hotter tropics for starters.

germanixx@lemmings.world on 30 Jun 08:29 next collapse

When do we start shoving the people responsible into prisons? The airlines, car, weapon manufacturers,…

monogram@feddit.nl on 30 Jun 08:56 next collapse

When we stop voting out politicians that try to add a carbon tax.

Goldholz@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 30 Jun 09:47 collapse

“But the greeens they want to do something!!! You have to fear them!! They want to take away your schnitzel! Force you to be vegaaaan!!!” - insert any politician you want here

prex@aussie.zone on 30 Jun 10:02 collapse
Philamand@jlai.lu on 30 Jun 10:56 next collapse

That would be inhumane, they don’t have AC in prisons.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 13:53 next collapse
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debil@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 17:07 collapse

Focus on being part of the solution: Go vegan. Then tell your friends and family to go vegan. Tell them to do the same to their friends and family members.

Once we’ve gotten rid of dairy and meat production, we can toy with the CEO’s and prisons.

starelfsc2@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 20:54 next collapse

Aren’t airplane flights and cars and just waste in general bigger contributors? I’m all for more people going vegan but I remember a carbon footprint analysis saying some of the worst contributors were planes cars waste and then food. Having a kid was the biggest contributor but that’s a bit obvious.

chaospatterns@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 22:42 collapse

Yes, but from a societal perspective, theres value in making cuts in a lot of different places.

Maybe you can do a meatless Monday, and somebody else will go vegan. Tell the people in private jets to stop flying private, but the family that’s going to another culture and learning and maybe becoming better has benefits.

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:55 collapse

Vegetarian is enough to get most of the benefits for environmental reasons. But it’s foolish to wait until that happens, it can’t wait.

debil@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 22:00 collapse

Source on that? I’d reckon dairy and egg industry equally bad as meat industry. Here in northern Europe dairy and meat industry go hand in hand, that is, when a dairy cow stops being productive it gets ground to beef.

Blooper@lemmynsfw.com on 30 Jun 22:06 next collapse

I don’t think this is true for eggs. I’ve read that the egg-laying chickens are completely detached from those raised for their meat. Perhaps best demonstrated with the recent egg shortages having no impact to poultry prices.

debil@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 05:26 collapse

With dairy and egg industry I was referring to a lacto-ovo vegetarian diet. Egg laying breed is totally different compared to broilers that are bred specifically to be edible.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 30 Jun 23:33 collapse

Here in northern Europe dairy and meat industry go hand in hand, that is, when a dairy cow stops being productive it gets ground to beef.

For regions where beef as food is more valued than here (beef’s so expensive, few people buy it in Estonia), meat moos are entirely different breeds and fed differently. Milk moos might end up as mince, but probably not a quality steak. You don’t need nearly as many moos if you’re only producing milk, and then maybe some meat products from cows, compared to when you’re raising a bunch specifically to be eaten.

Chickens raised for meat also don’t lay eggs. So if you only eat eggs and not chicken, way fewer chickens are needed. Also, if you’re not even willing to go vegetarian, switch out beef and pork for chicken. Per kilogram of meat, chicken is way less carbon intensive (pork is also less intensive than beef). It’s still a lot compared to eating potatoes from your own garden of course.

debil@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 05:42 collapse

And this is why the best reason to go vegan is for the animals.

helios@social.ggbox.fr on 30 Jun 12:16 next collapse

While it is hard to link individual extreme weather events to climate change, heatwaves are becoming more common and more intense due to climate change.

Not that hard after all.

A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 13:51 next collapse

We cant link this unusual weather to Climate change… but its unusual weather thats never been seen before at this frequency or ferocity. Its a mystery~!

funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works on 30 Jun 14:53 collapse

man if only there was a way to link the changing climate to climate change

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:49 collapse

There’s a basic assumption that the climate of an area is fixed. We don’t really have a good mechanism for adjusting the climate of an area quickly. But eventually you have to say that the weather hasn’t been hotter than normal for a decade, this is just the new normal.

Zron@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 14:55 next collapse

“It’s hard to link changes in climate to climate change”

Is the author stupid?

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 30 Jun 15:49 collapse

No, individual extreme events are not “changes in climate”. It’s easy to say that the rise in heatwaves is caused by climate change but it’s much harder to prove that this specific individual heatwave would never have happened were it not for climate change.

Zron@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 15:59 collapse

The average global temperature has been rising steadily with greenhouse gas emissions, for over 50 years, but sure we’ll just ignore that and say it’s impossible to know.

We only have the one planet, sometimes you can’t get multiple data sets. But you can certainly study the things that are happening and make predictions based on that.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 30 Jun 16:11 collapse

No, you’re missing the point. We have conclusively “linked changes in climate to climate change” as your comment eloquently put it. That’s not really up for debate. But weather systems are extremely complex and extreme events have always occurred. So you can’t say that this one specific heatwave is caused only because of this trend.

When it comes to the urgency of doing something about it, that doesn’t matter. It’s absolutely sufficient to say “this type of event will occur increasingly often” to establish that it is an existential crisis. You don’t have to be able to prove anything at all about this one very hot week in order to say that it is probably the single most important issue for us to tackle (along with the politics that prevent us from doing that).

But we don’t have the science and statistics to generally link individual events to a trend in isolation, and we shouldn’t misrepresent the science that way.

oce@jlai.lu on 30 Jun 15:21 next collapse

From a scientific point of view this is correct, the climate system is too complex to say this particular event is due to climate change. Exceptional events happened in the past too. So you can only draw conclusions from larger statistics. What’s solid science is the increasing averages, increasing frequencies of extreme events etc. If it was scientifically informed, that’s what this kind of sentence mean.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 30 Jun 16:17 next collapse

Scientists do actually make attempts to investigate the contribution of the trends to specific events, it’s called extreme event attribution, but it is a very young field and the error bars on everything are still huge. That said,

The American Meteorological Society stated in 2016 that “the science has now advanced to the point that we can detect the effects of climate change on some events with high confidence”. [12]

But the quote from the article was strictly correct in saying “it’s hard”.

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:46 collapse

It started out hotter than it would be and the heatwave is at least a few degrees more severe than it would be otherwise.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 30 Jun 15:47 collapse

That sentence perfectly states the difficulty though. The trend: easy to link. One individual event: not that easy.

[deleted] on 30 Jun 13:48 next collapse
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remon@ani.social on 30 Jun 13:57 collapse

But wouldn’t flying to Mallorca be going towards the heat (from most of Europe)?

Jumi@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 13:52 next collapse

The Mediterranean is 4-6°C warmer than usually at this time of year

TheObviousSolution@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 15:14 next collapse

The Spanish roulette is not having a siesta.

ArsonButCute@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 30 Jun 15:30 next collapse

I had to convert from Common to Freedom for this one. Are y’all ok over there? I’m used to that kind of heat here in the desert but goodness I couldn’t imagine 115f near the coast y’all must be dying 😬

vxx@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 15:39 next collapse

The south of spain usually has dry air, it’s at 12% right now.

But even in germany it’s okay because it hasn’t really rained that much this year (yay climate change), so it’s hot but bearable. It’s 31°C with “only” 45% right now.

We will get 37°C the next days, so I might change my stance.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 30 Jun 15:46 next collapse

Are y’all ok over there?

No, not really, with humidity and no aircon anything over the high 90s starts to get pretty unpleasant, especially when it goes on for days and doesn’t cool down properly at night, so you can’t cool your house down.

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:51 collapse

Cooling down at night is actually a really big deal, plants and animals both use the chill night to rest from the heat. When the night stays hot then the heat really does a lot more damage to health.

perestroika@slrpnk.net on 30 Jun 20:37 collapse

At this temperature, emergency medical departments are guaranteed to be full. Weeks later, an uptick in mortality is registered on stats, without exception.

IndustryStandard@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 15:50 next collapse

Have they considered spending 5% of their GDP on weapons? That will surely save humanity.

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:44 next collapse

There are steps needed to slow global warming and become carbon neutral. Those don’t matter much if someone shows up and machine guns your town and loots it.

tempest@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:59 collapse

Honestly if they spend that on weapons and then use it lower the population it could help.

Shoot maybe Thanos was right…

REDACTED@infosec.pub on 01 Jul 09:19 collapse

It’s an endless loop if you think about it

catty@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 16:56 next collapse

heatwave

catty@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 17:00 next collapse

Could we build a huge glas dome around a city, with adjustable mirrored / polarised surfaces to block out the heat using electricity to alter the properties of the glass?

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 20:53 collapse

No, we literally cannot safely build a glass dome that big. I do think large blimps with reflective tops could cool a city a little though.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 12:06 collapse

It’s possible to protect against heatwaves on a city level. Increase the albedo value of the city by doing the following: Incentivize lighter colored roofing and walls, grow leafy trees for shade, cover parking lots with solar roofing (and add EV chargers). Basically do whatever possible to reduce the amount of asphalt and darkish materials in general, being hit by sunshine.

No it won’t save your ass when ambient temperature is 50C, but considering that cities are by their very nature hotter than the ambient temperature out side of the city, these things would help reduce that gap.

MDCCCLV@lemmy.ca on 02 Jul 20:04 collapse

Trees are good and general greenery too, but then you run into water issues which will be the limiting factor for a lot of stuff going forward as fresh water availability decreases and groundwater runs low.

boonhet@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jul 20:41 collapse

Yeah, hoping we can avoid that, but it’s not looking too great. It’s a mitigation for today’s world, but not for the future unless we also manage to solve the water issue. And just global warming in general.

Wilco@lemmy.zip on 30 Jun 22:19 next collapse

46 degrees is just a fine chilly day!

::laughs in Fahrenheit::

breecher@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jul 08:24 collapse

Laughs at fahrenheit

squirrelwithnut@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 22:29 next collapse

That’s 115° in human units. Absolutely bonkers.

theacharnian@lemmy.ca on 30 Jun 22:45 next collapse

Would it kill you to not jokingly deny the humanity of every person outside the United States, Liberia, and the Cayman Islands? Just say Fahrenheit. Jeez, yank.

NigelFrobisher@aussie.zone on 30 Jun 23:10 next collapse

We have to put up with US-defaultism even in world@lemmy.world

OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml on 01 Jul 00:53 collapse

Damn this got more downvotes than supporting Israel

DarrinBrunner@lemmy.world on 30 Jun 23:29 next collapse

El Granado, Spain humidity is at 34% at this temp, so it could be much worse.

WizardofFrobozz@lemmy.ca on 01 Jul 08:38 next collapse

Such an excellent photo, too

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ca/pictrs/image/3c57757f-640f-4061-9cd4-64777e4d078f.png">

Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml on 01 Jul 08:46 collapse

You’re going trigger boomers with that map. I love it.

chrizzly@feddit.org on 01 Jul 09:17 collapse

I have to ask, why is that?

Darleys_Brew@lemmy.ml on 01 Jul 09:44 collapse

Boomers/conspiracy theorists think that the news organisations are using darker red to scare people into falling for climate change.

chrizzly@feddit.org on 01 Jul 15:39 collapse

Oh wow, havent heard of that one, thanks for the clarification!

toppy@lemy.lol on 01 Jul 09:00 next collapse

Maybe because of global warming.

smeenz@lemmy.nz on 01 Jul 21:45 collapse

Nah, its because of the gay frogs

Mamdani_Da_Savior@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 12:20 next collapse

Watch them get to 50C in a few years

Goldholz@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jul 13:44 collapse

Dont be so modest. 60°C

Gammelfisch@lemmy.world on 01 Jul 22:01 collapse

Here’s to drinking lots of H2O. At least it’s a dry heat. I lose my shit in high humid heat.