Why Europe Melts at 35°C — When India Doesn’t
In June 2026, a deadly heat dome pushed France past 44°C and gave the UK its hottest-ever June — yet much of the chaos struck at just 35-36°C. Why does that temperature, an ordinary summer day in India, break Europe? The answer is a lesson in climate change, infrastructure, and cooling justice.
Europe struggles at 35-36°C not because the heat is worse, but because it is unprepared: most homes were built to trap warmth for cold winters, only ~20% have air conditioning, public infrastructure isn’t designed for heat, the population is older, and people are not acclimatised. India copes better at the same temperature thanks to heat-adapted bodies, heat-conscious architecture and behaviour, fans and coolers, and Heat Action Plans — though India faces its own deadlier crisis above 45°C. The core issue for both is climate change plus adaptation and cooling justice.
In June 2026, Europe endured its second severe heatwave in two months. A vast heat dome parked over Western Europe pushed France to its hottest day on record (one town topped 44°C) and gave the United Kingdom its hottest June ever — breaking a 1976 record that had stood for 50 years. Scientists called the event “virtually impossible” without human-caused climate change. Yet much of the disruption — closed schools, rail warnings, deaths — occurred around 35-36°C, a temperature most Indians would consider an unremarkable summer afternoon. That paradox is worth unpacking.
The same thermometer reading can be a normal Tuesday in Nagpur and a national emergency in London. Heat is not just a number on a thermometer — it is a relationship between climate, the buildings we live in, the bodies we have adapted, and the systems we have built to cope. — Legacy IAS Faculty
Why Is Europe Facing These Heatwaves?
Heatwaves — unusually hot conditions lasting several days, with hot days and warm nights — are becoming more frequent and intense. The drivers stack on top of each other:
Climate Change
Rising greenhouse gases lift the baseline temperature, making extreme heat far more likely. Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent — about twice the global average.
The Heat Dome
A high-pressure system (sustained by an “omega block”) traps hot air — clear skies, low winds, dry soils, warm oceans — producing severe, persistent heat with no night-time relief.
El Niño
A returning El Niño can add to global warming as an extra heating influence — though climate change, not El Niño, is the main driver of the current event.
Urban Heat Island
Concrete, asphalt and dark roofs absorb heat by day and release it at night; little greenery means cities stay hot — so nights never cool down.
Climate change isn’t only rising temperature — it creates a connected chain. Higher temperatures dry soils and cause droughts; warmer air holds more water vapour, so when rain does come it falls intensely, causing urban floods. Europe can thus swing between drought and flooding in the same climatic period — and warmer winters bring less snow, while summers grow drier.
The Big Question — Why 35°C Breaks Europe but Is Normal in India
This is the heart of the matter. The same temperature lands very differently because of how each society is built, adapted, and prepared:
| Factor | Europe | India |
|---|---|---|
| Buildings | Designed to retain heat for cold winters — insulation, small windows, dark roofs, little cross-ventilation. | Traditionally designed to shed heat — thick walls, courtyards, verandas, high ceilings, jaalis, light-coloured surfaces. |
| Air Conditioning | Only ~20% of homes have AC; fans and coolers are uncommon. | Ceiling fans are near-universal; AC and air-coolers are widespread and growing fast. |
| Acclimatisation | Bodies aren’t adapted to sustained heat; a sudden 35°C is physiologically shocking. | Populations are heat-adapted — more efficient sweating and tolerance built over a lifetime. |
| Behaviour | Daily life continues unchanged — work, travel, school in the heat. | Life adapts to heat — early mornings, midday rest, loose cotton, hydration (water, buttermilk, ORS), shaded markets. |
| Preparedness | Heat often treated as an inconvenience, not a public-health emergency. | Growing network of Heat Action Plans and early-warning systems. |
| Public Systems | Many homes, trains & offices lack cooling; grids strain under sudden AC demand. | Transport, malls & offices increasingly air-conditioned; heat is “expected.” |
| Other Factors | High latitude → very long summer days; older, more vulnerable population. | Lower latitude with established coping norms across society. |
A huge reason European heat turns deadly is that the heat dome and urban heat island keep night temperatures high (“tropical nights”). The human body relies on cooler nights to recover; when nights stay above ~20-25°C for days, heat stress accumulates — which is why even moderate daytime highs become dangerous in unprepared cities.
But India Is Not Immune — A Crucial Caveat
It would be wrong to conclude that Indian heat is “safe.” India copes better at 35°C, but it faces an even more extreme crisis: temperatures regularly cross 45°C in many regions, and heatwaves cause significant illness and death every summer. India’s challenge is therefore more urgent, not less — and rising humidity makes it deadlier still.
Air temperature alone is misleading. The wet-bulb temperature combines heat and humidity — and a sustained wet-bulb reading of about 35°C marks the limit of human survivability, because the body can no longer cool itself by sweating. This is why a “feels-like” (heat index) value at 35°C air temperature and 80% humidity can approach 50°C. India’s humid heat (e.g., coastal and Gangetic plains) is especially dangerous on this metric.
Cooling Has Become a Question of Climate Justice
In extreme heat, cooling is a survival need, not a luxury — especially for the elderly, children, outdoor workers, low-income households, and the sick. Yet a deep unfairness runs through it:
Have contributed more to emissions historically — and can usually afford air conditioning to escape the heat.
Face greater heat exposure (outdoor work, poor housing) yet often cannot afford cooling at all.
So access to cooling should be treated as an issue of climate justice and public health, not mere personal consumption. The challenge is to provide cooling that is both affordable and environmentally sustainable — since energy-hungry ACs can themselves worsen emissions and the urban heat island.
Solutions — Mitigation + Adaptation, Together
Technology alone won’t “fix” this; adaptation needs time, money, infrastructure, awareness, and political will. A balanced toolkit:
Cool & Reflective Roofs
White/reflective roofs cut heat absorption and lower indoor temperatures with little energy.
Green & Blue Spaces
More trees, parks and water bodies cool cities through shade and evaporation, easing the heat island.
Passive Cooling Design
Shutters, shading, cross-ventilation, and heat-resistant materials reduce the need for AC.
Heat Action Plans
Early-warning systems, vulnerable-person registers, cooling shelters and health coordination save lives.
India offers global lessons here. Ahmedabad launched South Asia’s first Heat Action Plan (2013) after a deadly 2010 heatwave, cutting heat deaths through early warnings and cool-roof drives. The NDMA issues national heatwave guidelines, and India was among the first countries to release a Cooling Action Plan (ICAP, 2019) to provide sustainable cooling while curbing refrigerant emissions. Europe’s France offers the other lesson — after its 2003 heatwave killed ~15,000 people, it built heat-health action plans, warning systems and vulnerable-person registers (much like the policy shift after the 1952 London smog).
UPSC Prelims 2026-Standard MCQs
Q1. Consider the following statements regarding a “heat dome”:
2. It is often associated with an “omega block” in atmospheric circulation.
3. It traps hot air, producing clear skies, low winds and warmer nights.
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) All three
(d) None
Show Answer
Q2. With reference to the Urban Heat Island (UHI) effect, consider the following statements:
2. Loss of green cover reduces cooling through shade and evaporation.
3. The UHI effect makes urban nights cooler than surrounding rural areas.
(a) 1 and 2 only
(b) 2 and 3 only
(c) 1 and 3 only
(d) 1, 2 and 3
Show Answer
Q3. Consider the following statements about wet-bulb temperature:
2. A sustained wet-bulb temperature of about 35°C is considered the limit of human survivability.
3. High humidity reduces the body’s ability to cool itself through sweating.
(a) Only one
(b) Only two
(c) All three
(d) None
Show Answer
Q4. Consider the following pairs of climate-adaptation measures and their effect:
2. Urban green & blue spaces — cool cities via shade and evaporation.
3. Heat Action Plans — provide early warnings and cooling shelters.
4. Increasing dark, concrete-heavy surfaces — lower urban temperatures.
(a) Only two
(b) Only three
(c) All four
(d) Only one
Show Answer
Probable UPSC Mains Question
Q (GS-III, 15 marks). “Heatwaves are increasingly a public-health emergency rather than a mere weather phenomenon.” In this light, examine why developed regions like Europe struggle with extreme heat, and suggest sustainable, equitable cooling measures India can adopt.
Show Approach
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Why is Europe so badly affected by heatwaves at relatively low temperatures?
Because Europe is poorly adapted to heat: most homes were built to retain warmth for cold winters, only about 20% have air conditioning, public infrastructure isn’t designed for heat, the population is older, and people aren’t physiologically acclimatised. So 35-36°C — routine in India — can become a public-health emergency there.
Q2. What is causing the 2026 European heatwave?
A persistent heat dome (a high-pressure system held in place by an “omega block”) is trapping hot, dry Saharan air over Western Europe, intensified by human-caused climate change. Europe is the world’s fastest-warming continent, heating at roughly twice the global average, which makes such events more frequent and severe.
Q3. Why can India handle 35°C more easily?
Through a mix of heat-conscious architecture (courtyards, thick walls, ventilation), widespread fans and coolers, lifelong physiological acclimatisation, heat-aware daily behaviour (midday rest, hydration, light clothing), and growing Heat Action Plans. However, India faces its own severe crisis above 45°C and in humid regions.
Q4. What is “cooling justice”?
It is the idea that access to cooling should be treated as a matter of climate justice and public health, not just personal consumption — because wealthier groups (who emitted more historically) can afford cooling, while poorer, more heat-exposed groups often cannot. The goal is affordable, sustainable cooling for all.
Key Takeaways
- The cause: climate change (Europe is warming ~2× the global average) plus a heat dome, dry soils, and the urban heat island made the June 2026 heatwave severe and “virtually impossible” without warming.
- Why 35°C breaks Europe: homes built to trap heat, only ~20% AC penetration, no acclimatisation, ageing population, unprepared systems, and deadly “tropical nights.”
- Why India copes at 35°C: heat-conscious architecture & behaviour, fans/coolers, acclimatisation, and Heat Action Plans — but India faces a deadlier 45°C+ and humid-heat crisis.
- Wet-bulb temperature (heat + humidity) is the real danger metric — ~35°C sustained is the survivability limit.
- Cooling justice: access to affordable, sustainable cooling is a public-health and equity issue, not a luxury.
- The response: combine mitigation with adaptation — cool roofs, green cities, passive design, Heat Action Plans (Ahmedabad model), NDMA guidelines, and the India Cooling Action Plan.
Master Environment & Current Affairs with Legacy IAS — Bangalore
Daily current-affairs analysis, Prelims-Mains integration, and expert mentorship from Bangalore’s most trusted UPSC faculty.


