https://19-pacheco-torgal-19.blogspot.com/2026/06/europe-cannot-air-condition-its-way-out.html
Still following my previous post, “On Europe’s catastrophic heatwave collapse” (linked above), Reuters has now revealed the architectural dimension of the disaster: Europe is not merely being hit by extreme heat. It is being hit by extreme heat inside buildings designed to resist a different century.Not badly built. Worse: efficiently built for the wrong enemy. Built to preserve warmth. Built to defeat winter. Built for a Europe that has disappeared from the climate system but remains alive in building codes, renovation policies and official complacency.https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/hot-stuck-paris-london-homes-not-built-heat-2026-06-26/
This is the real scandal. Europe spent decades improving buildings for one half of the climate problem while neglecting the other, insulating, sealing and regulating in the name of energy efficiency, with winter as the dominant model. Now those same buildings trap heat with the efficiency of a well-designed mistake. This is not merely discomfort. It is architectural obsolescence on a continental scale. Parisian attic flats beneath zinc roofs become furnaces. London homes overheat. Schools close. Hospitals struggle. The elderly are told to stay indoors, as if indoors were still a place of protection. A dwelling can satisfy every formal standard and still fail at the most basic civilisational function: protecting human beings from hostile weather.
Reuters reports that only around a quarter of European households have air conditioning, compared with roughly 90% in the United States and Japan. At first, this may sound like ecological virtue. In reality, it exposes Europe’s immense adaptation gap: neither the cooling equipment of richer societies nor the passive resilience that would make such equipment largely unnecessary, but a housing stock stranded between old climate assumptions and new thermal realities. This is why the usual language has become unbearable. Strategy. Resilience. Renovation wave. Climate neutrality. Just transition. The vocabulary is immaculate. The buildings are not. Europe’s problem is not the absence of documents; it is the absence of consequences. Policymakers knew heatwaves would intensify. They knew dense cities, ageing populations, poor housing and insufficient cooling would collide. Yet overheating was still treated as a secondary inconvenience rather than a public-health emergency.
And Europe cannot simply import the American answer of mass air conditioning. It may cool those who can afford it, but it also raises peak electricity demand and can worsen the urban heat-island effect. The answer is not more machines attached to bad buildings and failed policy and political cowardice. It is external shading before decorative façades, cool roofs before slogans, passive cooling before dependence on peak electricity, and deep renovation measured not by winter savings alone, but by summer survivability. Because survivability is the word Europe still avoids. A building is not sustainable if it becomes dangerous during a heatwave. A city is not resilient because it has a plan. It is resilient only if its poorest, oldest and sickest residents can survive the next thermal shock without luck, charity or wet towels.
The tragedy is not that Europe lacked knowledge. It had the knowledge, the money, the universities, the engineers, the climate models, the directives, the committees and the warning signs and still managed to build, renovate and regulate its way into a furnace.
Declaration of competing interests - I am currently preparing a new edition of Eco-efficient Materials for Reducing Cooling Needs in Buildings and Construction, originally published by Elsevier in 2020. What could once be framed as a specialised technical field, cool pavements, façades, roofs, smart glazing and passive cooling technologies has now become a matter of public urgency: whether European buildings can still protect human beings in the climate they actually inhabit, rather than in the climate for which they were designed.