Environment & Energy
Related: About this forum"Like Working In A Volcano" - Snapshots Of Europe's Heatwave
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In the searing heart of inland Sicily, Luigi Randazzo, 47, a sous-chef at a restaurant was plating a dish of mussels. I was working next to the kettle, where the thermometer read 60 degrees, he said. The fryer was on. So was the oven. It felt like working inside a volcano. While diners waited in the cool comfort of air conditioning, Randazzo moved from burner to burner in the kitchen, clad in a chefs uniform soaked with sweat. It felt like someone had thrown a bucket of water in my face, he said. We have an air conditioner in the kitchen, but its completely useless when all the machines are running. In 2021, temperatures in Sicily hit a record 48.8C (119.8F). Randazzo works in the part of the island where the desert is slowly advancing across the countryside, and where, in the last six months of 2023, just 150mm of rain fell.
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Sven, 58, had felt the heat creep up over the last two weeks as he rewired a telecommunications box. By Tuesday afternoon, it had hit 33C, and would rise to a sweltering 37C the following day. Ive set this up to meet my needs, he said from under a bright green umbrella. Ive got a coolbox, I avoid working under the blazing sun, and I put a cap on when it hits. Otherwise, its a case of not moving too fast. German employees do not have a legal right to take time off work in the heat but bosses have a duty of care to their workers. This can mean setting up fans in offices or setting up shade on construction sites. For me, the heat is normal, said Sven, but you do have to do things differently.
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Built of cast iron and glass in 1866, a couple of decades before the Eiffel Tower, the Marché St Quentin is the largest covered food market in Paris. It was designed to be light and airy in all seasons, but not for 39.3C which is what the nearby Lariboisière weather station recorded at 5pm on Tuesday. It was inhumane, really brutal, said Sahra Baadache, 27, one of the markets three cheesemongers. A sauna. A steam bath. St Quentin is basically a greenhouse and theres no way of ventilating or cooling it down. It was 42C in here by mid-afternoon. People really suffered. Stallholders who live nearby were going home for cold showers.
Cheese and heat do not mix; textures and flavours change irreversibly. Baadache did what she could to save her 150-odd varieties, bringing out only a small fraction of her stock and covering up her two refrigerated display cabinets to keep the cold in. They survived, just, she said. But I was a wreck sweating about my cheeses, and sat behind two fridge motors generating even more heat. And, of course, there were no customers: No one came. So it was like a double punishment.
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https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/05/stories-from-six-countries-europe-extreme-heat

MIGuy
(42 posts)CO2 level hit 430 ppm and the News Media does not find that important enough to report.
Old Crank
(5,930 posts)I don't think it went over 33 C in our area.
We do have trees in the neighborhood which really helps.
We also mitigate our apartment temperature. No AC.
We have a sunny shade that is deployed over the south facing balcony. Doors and windows closed when the outside is hotter than inside. Open the place up at night. Two ceiling fans and one stand fan keep us below 26.
The one problem we have is our downstairs neighbors. They smoke like chimneys. They stench comes up and into our living room.