Earlier this week, I noted that Europe was being hit with a heat wave due to a naturally occurring phenomenon, an “omega block” in the jet stream.
As the British Isles are also experiencing high temperatures, some of their local officials decided it was a fine time to enact some “Net Zero” restrictions on residents’ air conditioning units.
Homeowners are being forced to tear out air conditioning from their private properties under climate laws, despite rising temperatures.Council planning officers ordered residents to remove air-con units over fears they produce too much carbon dioxide, stating they should only be used as a “last resort”.The net zero clampdown is part of building regulations that state “active cooling” should only ever be allowed when all other means of “passive cooling”, such as opening windows or using fans, have been exhausted….Meanwhile, temperatures are forecast to reach as high as 40C this week, with Britain sweltering under a record heatwave that has forced schools to close, brought trains to a halt and led to the Met Office issuing a red “risk-to-life” warning.
This news was met by some humorous analysis on social media.
It must be noted that the U.K. government has explicitly stated that “air conditioning units are not banned” and can be installed in both existing and new homes, usually without planning permission — provided they do not materially affect the building’s external appearance. However, some U.K. local councils (notably in London boroughs) are using planning and “Net Zero”-aligned policies to discourage or require removal of external AC units that breach their eco-activist rules.
Interestingly, about one month ago, I wrote that a review of the numbers shows that heat-related deaths across Europe exceed the number of gun deaths in the U.S., which was part of my continuing efforts to provide reality-based risk assessments to counter media-induced hysterics. Little did I realize how prophetic that post would be.
These developments, coupled with World Cup attendees’ recent discoveries about the glories of the U.S. — including our air conditioning — suggest that Europeans may be rethinking their reluctance to enjoy comfortable temperatures year-round.
To begin with, a recent article in the UK Times indicates that Britons are increasingly accepting high upfront and running costs as the price of staying cool and shifting away from traditional fans and “make do” cooling habits.
“For many homeowners in Hampshire, Berkshire, Surrey, and Oxfordshire, air conditioning is moving from luxury to necessity. The combination of hotter summers, more awareness of health benefits, and advances in energy efficiency is driving change.”
Legal Insurrection readers will note that in my latest article deriding the media’s “heat dome mania,” I reported that French officials banned public alcohol consumption in response to the high temperatures.
The constant undermining of personal choice and imposition of senseless energy policies has now become a major focus of French politics.
In France, far-right politicians who have advocated cutting net zero initiatives hope to gain from the heat wave, using it to accuse the government of failing to make the country more resilient, but also as a cultural issue against the hard left, which has often opposed the use of air-conditioning on environmental grounds.“If I am elected president, I will put into place a massive air-conditioning plan,” Marine Le Pen, the leader of the National Rally party, pledged on Friday, “starting in places with the most vulnerable populations.”Ms. Le Pen argues that air-conditioning units do not exacerbate global warming, saying that “when environmentalists don’t want something, they twist the studies, they pull things out of context.”
Given the hysteria that accompanied the outbreak of COVID, the health-risk argument should prove very effective. I hope the French are paying attention.
Air conditioning is estimated to reduce heat‑related mortality by roughly three‑quarters, based on a 2007 epidemiological analysis, and a Lancet study suggests that in 2019 alone, its growing use prevented about 195,000 heat‑related deaths in people over 65 worldwide.
And it appears that Europeans are making a move to make their lives a little more comfortable by ignoring the net-zero inanity.
In Italy, thousands of deaths during a 2003 heat wave appear to have been a final straw. That summer, an estimated 10-15% of households had AC units. By 2024, that number had soared to 56%, according to the National Institute of Statistics.Italy now accounts for one-third of electricity use on air conditioning in the European Union, according to EU data….In France, which experienced its “hottest days on record” this week, according to national meteorological agency Meteo-France, shops have been running out of air conditioners.
Meanwhile, the British have doubled the number of air conditioning units purchased over the past three years. The number now stands at 4 million, and it very likely to increase.
Europe’s heat wave is doing what years of debate could not: forcing a reality check on Net Zero orthodoxy.
When regulators crack down on air conditioning as temperatures hit dangerous levels, the gap between climate policy and human needs becomes impossible to ignore. The European markets are responding, and even politicians are now pivoting, as the basic imperative of staying alive and functional in extreme heat outweighs policies based on “climate crisis” pseudoscience.
In a nutshell, Europeans are choosing practicality over policy. Hopefully, it is not too little too late.
Image by perplexity.ai
CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY