6 comments

  • hydra2297 6 hours ago

    Interesting read. The infrastructure gap seems to be the bigger issue — most cities weren't built for sustained heat above 30°C. Green roofing and better urban planning could help long-term.

  • sscaryterry 6 hours ago

    If this is going to be the new normal, we really should be driving for more heat-pumps (not the cheap ones that can only heat) way more aggressively.

    • manarth 6 hours ago

      I'm not sure many UK homes have the appropriate "skeleton" for cold-air ducting – you can use a heat-pump to cool things down, but getting the cool air to the rooms it needs to be in is likely to be a very expensive refit.

      Would piping cold water to a wall-mounted radiator help? I'm not sure it would take much heat out of the room, but I suppose it's possible

      • sscaryterry 6 hours ago

        The existing radiators wouldn't be sufficient. I was more thinking around new homes. There is no point in building them with heating only.

        • manarth 4 hours ago

          Ah, totally agree. Retro-fitting is expensive and disruptive, and new homes should be built for the environment we have coming (not just bidirectional heat-pumps, but also solar, passive cooling, better insulation, etc).

          It'd probably need legislation though, as house-builders aren't known to spend money on thoughtfully future-proofing homes.

  • rimworld 2 hours ago

    tbf it was the coolest May, I have ever experienced