> Due to extreme weather conditions, forced shut down of air cooling system from floor 1 to 7 for the rest of the day
It's like satire. What is AC for if not extreme heat?
gambiting · 2026-06-30 16:47:00 UTC
Normal day to day cooling, I mean, obviously? Like if you have a system designed to operate in 25-30C(normal summer in most of Europe) but then you have a spike of temperatures going to 40C for a few days in a row, it shouldn't really be a surprise the system doesn't work in conditions it wasn't designed for? The compressor overheats and shuts down, especially if it wasn't installed in the shade.
Just like heat pumps for heating in winter are amazing for our regular mild-ish winters, but if you get a really cold spell and it drops to -35C, it's just not going to work at all to a point where it might not even start - you could also say "well what's the point of a heating system that can't heat in extreme cold".
The extreme is the keyword.
rappatic · 2026-06-30 19:47:00 UTC
> but if you get a really cold spell and it drops to -35C
Temperatures near 40C have been recorded in Paris dozens of times since the early 2000s. I don't think the winter temperature in Paris has ever dropped much below -20C, let alone -35C. So this isn't a very fair analogy.
gambiting · 2026-06-30 21:03:57 UTC
What does temperature in Paris have to do with Brussels?
wongarsu · 2026-06-30 16:47:41 UTC
Historically temperatures above 30C (86F) were rare in Europe, so thats what many ACs are sized for. Now they face 40C (104F), and many AC installations can't keep up
Shutting down AC on floors 1 to 7 likely allows them to get better performance on floors 8 to 13
mytailorisrich · 2026-06-30 17:10:45 UTC
That's not true. Temperature above 30C are the norm in summer in Southern Europe (which means quite higher in the Sun and in a heat trap location). Now, yes 40C isn't.
But I am unconvinced that AC manufacturers have different "sizing"... An AC unit is for hot places and the outdoor unit may be in a very hot spots with ambient easily above 40C.
Edit: Yes, AC systems for a whole building are different but still the system on the roof experiences the full Sun and very hot conditions, this isn't the issue. Perhaps they simply badly designed it so that it hasn't got the capacity to cool the whole building when it's actually hot so they prioritised (actually now I get that this is what you meant). Obviously it is easier to blame "weather conditions"...
wongarsu · 2026-06-30 17:22:00 UTC
Brussels is however not in Southern Europe
By sizing I simply mean the number and capacity of roof units. Cooling an office building down by 8C is a lot easier than cooling it by 18C. I doubt half the roof units are shut down. Maybe some are, but most will have their output redirected to cooling the top half of the building
mytailorisrich · 2026-06-30 17:58:01 UTC
In which case it would be just plain bad design if you can't have the whole building on AC when you actually need it...
Edit: it'd be interesting to know how many buildings in Belgium have had the same issue.
gambiting · 2026-06-30 18:24:46 UTC
You can leave it on when you actually need it - meaning all summer long, in the conditions that are typical for that location.
It's like saying what's the point of having a house if you aren't safe in it during a tornado. It's an exceptional event. The problem is that these truly exceptional events which only happened once every 10 days for a day or two, are now becoming a norm. My own 12k BTU minisplit could cool my house down every summer, no problem, even down to 18C if I wanted it to. But in the recent heatwave it just can't keep up, there is more heat coming into the house than the system can remove.
Arnt · 2026-06-30 17:32:56 UTC
That building doesn't have the kind of outdoor unit you're thinking of, it has central climate control and gadgetry on the roof. You can see it on Google Maps.
Also 19 satellite antennae, if my count is right.
slillibri · 2026-06-30 16:57:40 UTC
When there is not enough AC, people sweat. It’s better for half to sweat to death so the other half can remain frosty.
Arnt · 2026-06-30 17:42:51 UTC
FWIW this happened on Friday afternoon and the AC was back in working order on Monday morning.
Oras · 2026-06-30 16:37:52 UTC
> The heat wave has prompted a renewed discussion about the lack of air-conditioning systems in homes and offices across much of Europe
Discussion, common sense requires discussion. All you need to know about them in one sentence.
basisword · 2026-06-30 16:45:40 UTC
Most ordinary working people can't afford the cost of installing a system. Even a portable one.
Edit: Downvoted because HN users don't understand living paycheque to paycheque. Talk about an echo chamber.
christkv · 2026-06-30 16:47:11 UTC
What are you on about. They are not expensive at all. What they can't afford is to pay the electrical bill of running one.
caycep · 2026-06-30 16:53:04 UTC
unless they also come w/ rooftop solar?
new mini splits are way more efficient than older systems as well.
insulation in older homes/buildings might be an issue though
cineticdaffodil · 2026-06-30 16:53:50 UTC
Ironically- while often having solar on the roof.
antonkochubey · 2026-06-30 16:57:42 UTC
My multisplit system costs <€60 a month to run even during the hottest months, which is way below heating costs during winter. And that's keeping entire apartment at constant 22ºC - people with higher "comfort temperature" can keep the bill significantly lower.
basisword · 2026-06-30 17:59:51 UTC
I got a 7000BTU one last week. One of cheapest I could find (I suspect some price gouging given the timing of my purchase). Very small, works in one small room. It was about £400. None of my family or friends have £400 sitting around that they can spend on a whim to save them a few weeks of suffering. A huge number of people live paycheque to paycheque and have no savings or credit lines available to them.
Oras · 2026-06-30 16:47:53 UTC
Most people can’t afford private jets, let’s ban them for those officials then
braingravy · 2026-06-30 17:01:29 UTC
Sounds good! It was a waste to begin with. They can handle first-class.
ExoticPearTree · 2026-06-30 16:51:22 UTC
A 12K BTU mini-split system is about 300EUR. How is this unaffordable for most people? Even an 18K unit is about 500-600EUR.
antonkochubey · 2026-06-30 16:56:39 UTC
Realistically a decent mini-split that won't break in a year and won't make too much noise starts at ~€600-800 + €400 installation in a low-labor-cost country (Latvia), in high-labor-cost countries such as Germany the installation bit might be twice-thrice as expensive.
alistairSH · 2026-06-30 17:22:12 UTC
Relative to buying the house/apartment in the first place, that's still not much money.
boesboes · 2026-06-30 17:13:39 UTC
Where? The only mobile split unit i can find is 899
wnevets · 2026-06-30 16:53:07 UTC
Something is very wrong with the EU if ordinary Europeans can't afford a $150 window unit.
rapsey · 2026-06-30 17:04:46 UTC
It's not the money. In many places you need to go through permitting to get it and they do not want to give it to you. Often you also need a signed approval from every person in the building.
mtoner23 · 2026-06-30 17:15:10 UTC
so yes something is very wrong
wnevets · 2026-06-30 17:16:23 UTC
There is something very wrong in the EU if installing a life saving window air conditioner requires a permit or signed approval from every person in the building.
rapsey · 2026-06-30 18:33:52 UTC
They literally built a new hospital in germany without AC. 28C/82F degrees in surgery.
Yossarrian22 · 2026-06-30 19:33:03 UTC
How? I thought hospital AC had the dual role of air filtration to reduce spread of bacteria and viruses
mytailorisrich · 2026-06-30 18:14:59 UTC
This is true. In many places you can't install the outdoor unit on the street-facing side of the building without approval, and you won't get it in most cases, and this is indeed in addition to getting approval from your building's residents association if you live in a flat.
black3r · 2026-06-30 16:53:46 UTC
It's not that expensive. There are other reasons why people can't install one in Europe than money. Mostly for people living in apartments. In an apartment building you need the approval of other apartment owners to "modify the building facade". And some people have terrible neighbors. Another thing that happens in Europe is that if the building is 100+ years old, it's facade may be protected as a "historic building" and then you need another approval from some bureaucrats which are responsible for protecting historic buildings. And of course if you're renting, you need to convince your landlord if you want a proper AC not a portable one.
hparadiz · 2026-06-30 17:05:45 UTC
People on here will literally write walls of text over the most mundane nonsense.
Shove the plastic tube outlet out of a window. End of installation. You're welcome.
Seriously why is this so difficult and what is this learned helplessness? You would rather be miserable than do literally anything?
black3r · 2026-06-30 17:59:09 UTC
I have one like that and so do my parents. But they're much less effective than classic split AC with an outside unit. A regular split can cool a bigger room to 24 even when it's 38 outside and is basically completely quiet. A portable AC cools down smaller rooms to ~27 when it's 38 outside and is noisy (50-60 dB).
hparadiz · 2026-06-30 18:49:42 UTC
That's cause you got the cheapest one and think all of them are like that. They come in different power levels and you can in fact find ones that are quiet.
6510 · 2026-06-30 19:26:16 UTC
People don't know which to buy. I got a really big one that doesn't make a lot of noise. I think on dehumidify it can suck 1.5 liters per hour out of the room. I think this because with 98% humidity the 0.5 liter tank is full in <20 minutes. The tank isn't removable, it has a lid 3 cm above the floor. Just low enough that one cant leave a large enough container under it.
hparadiz · 2026-06-30 19:30:42 UTC
Some of them use the waste heat to evaporate any accumulated water and have it come out of the heat exhaust as slightly humid air. The one I got when I lived in Hawaii had a hole where water would drip out of and you could attach a hose to it.
6510 · 2026-06-30 19:06:57 UTC
If the bottom of the window is 80cm or less from the floor you need safety glass. Therefore most windows are much further from the floor than that tube can reach. We also have very few sliding windows that allow such neat finish. A lot open at the top. Many turn left or right and are half the size of a door (because there is no AC) Running a crappy tiny portable single hose AC with the window open doesn't do much. Extra fun if you have roller shutters (for shade) with windows that open outwards.
hparadiz · 2026-06-30 19:09:14 UTC
Duct tape and card board is your friend. Get creative.
6510 · 2026-06-30 19:29:48 UTC
right, but first have to wait for the wife to overheat enough to allow it.
plorkyeran · 2026-06-30 20:40:35 UTC
The tube for my portable AC unit would quite easily reach the ~250cm to the tops of my windows and it is not unusually long. I'm not sure what makes you think that would be a problem.
Markoff · 2026-06-30 17:09:51 UTC
you don't need that on balcony, most of the apartments have balcony, stupid excuse, same applies for historical buildings with balcony
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?
If there is a balcony and you install it there, so nobody can see it from the street, is there an AC installed? Can you even use your balcony the way you want and place there big cardboard box if you need? Same thing. Facade is a one thing, balcony is something completely different, if you can't even use it, what's the point in having it.
graton · 2026-06-30 16:56:50 UTC
> Most ordinary working people can't afford the cost of installing a system. Even a portable one.
I just watched a video where a person bought a £200 portable unit. He was using it in the UK and said he spent about £0.89 / day. And I'm assuming they won't use it for that many days a year.
Seems affordable enough for "most ordinary working people"
As a side note, it's nearly impossible to buy a dual-hose portable AC in the UK and Europe. For whatever reason, the market has converged on inefficient single-hose portable ACs.
6510 · 2026-06-30 18:56:01 UTC
As an oblivious Europian I was breaking my head on how the design with a single hose could be considered good enough.
Other funny stuff:
- I haven't seen a single portable AC with a hose long enough to reach the window. Some come with tents and plastic things to seal the open window. The machine blows hot air out of the tube and air from outside is inevitable sucked in. If you could only hang the tube a few feet out of the window it wouldn't be sucking in the exhaust hot air back in.
- I've seen dozens with barely readable labels on the buttons in poorly contrasting colors. Some also have bright glowing leds next to the illegible text. Even if I switch on the lights (in the middle of the night) I cant read it because the leds are to bright. The buttons are spread out in some artistic arc with a nearly invisible fine line and lack a bump in the sticker they are made from.
- People here seem to love swamp chillers, some wet sponge or fabric with a fan pointed at it. Not sure what the ratio is, I think they roughly increase humidity by 10% for each 1C in temperature reduction with some favorable sweet spot above 90% humidity.
Then I see a video from an Amish dude hanging soaked bed sheets in front of the window explaining they don't have AC, they don't even have electricity, the wet sheets cut the temperature by 10 degrees apparently.
Markoff · 2026-06-30 17:06:28 UTC
funny take
Bulgaria is one of the poorest EU countries and I have seen there way more ACs than in much richer Czechia or elsewhere, this is not about price at all
heck, even in Czechia I find much more ACs in some poor cities compared to the richest Prague, I've seen bigger AC ratio per apartment in my small poor ~40K hometown than in Prague, in our 40 units building in Prague I was the first one to have AC, after many years now followed by neighbor under me, 2 out of 40 units in relatively rich Prague, crazy (though it's true our top corner of the building is warmest from all apartments)
zzzeek · 2026-06-30 17:07:33 UTC
there is significant resistance to air conditioning in Europe at many levels (all of which are invalid or solvable):
* "not technically feasible" - people talk about old buildings with oddly shaped windows
* "can't afford it" - as you see here. people talk about the units themselves and the electricity bills
* "our infrastructure can't handle it" - this has to do with things like grids overheating, failing
* "our infrastructure can't handle <the regulations>" - things like nuclear reactors in France not allowed to raise the temperature of rivers by another N degrees during a heat wave
* "it's bad for global warming" - a little late for that, probably should save lives first
literally hospitals in europe don't have AC throughout the entire building yet. global warming is really coming at them fast
Tarq0n · 2026-06-30 17:08:36 UTC
In the past with harmful refrigerants and lack of renewable energy AC simply was not justifiable in most of Europe. Progress on both fronts plus global warming is changing that only recently.
bee_rider · 2026-06-30 17:11:41 UTC
On the bright side they’ve probably waited long enough to roll out heat pumps instead of window ACs, right?
quantummagic · 2026-06-30 17:14:57 UTC
As far as I know, a heat pump and an AC unit are essentially identical. Although some heat pumps can be reversed, and act as heaters in the winter. But one isn't more efficient than the other, they employ the exact same physical refrigeration cycle.
coryrc · 2026-06-30 17:17:17 UTC
I think GP's point is that winter heating can shift to nuclear- and wind-powered instead of mostly burning fossil fuels.
bee_rider · 2026-06-30 17:21:49 UTC
Oh, I had them filed in by brain under “more efficient temperature control” but it looks like they don’t have an advantage over ACs when cooling. (Just over typical heaters, when heating). Oops.
wil421 · 2026-06-30 17:25:59 UTC
That’s true however moving heat in the winter is much better than burning things.
Gas furnaces are 80%-98% efficient, heat pumps are 300-400%.
quantummagic · 2026-06-30 17:17:47 UTC
Some of the discussion going online, has asserted that heat related deaths in Europe exceed gun related deaths in the USA by some margin. If true, it has been ignored as a problem for too long.
delecti · 2026-06-30 17:36:03 UTC
Yeah, annual heat deaths in Europe (about 70k) exceed annual gun deaths in the US (about 44k) in absolute numbers. They're slightly under US gun deaths if you adjust for population (about 13 per 100k gun deaths in the US, and 12 heat deaths per 100k in Europe).
In comparison, fewer than 2k people die annually of heat in the US, well under 1 per 100k. And for symmetry, there are about 7k gun deaths annually in the EU, which is just slightly under 1 per 100k.
pseudo0 · 2026-06-30 18:03:44 UTC
The WHO claims it's over 170k heat-related deaths per year, not 70k.
So in summary, the chance of a person dying from heat or guns is roughly equal in the EU and the US.
mancerayder · 2026-06-30 17:29:49 UTC
Well the Greens in Europe handed Russia leverage thanks to relying on natural gas instead of nuclear, which it opposed (thanks German Greens).
In France these ideologues oppose A/C becauase it's evil: it makes us comfortable when we should be uncomfortable - if we are comfortable in an era of climate change, we'll only make it worse. And it's all America's fault anyway because of their emissions.
When do we vote out ideologues and have logical people in power?
redserk · 2026-06-30 17:36:22 UTC
This nuclear argument is getting quite stale. Germany seems to be investing quite a bit in other energies just fine.
120GW of nameplate solar capacity is nothing to sneeze at even with the latitude challenge. That's more solar than almost all of California's energy generation combined, or most of the eastern United States.
mancerayder · 2026-06-30 19:22:22 UTC
Did I misread? I hover over the Nuclear and it literally says 0% of electricity is nuclear" for Germany.
cbarnes99 · 2026-06-30 16:38:30 UTC
Why the fuck does extreme heat require turning off the AC?
nickff · 2026-06-30 16:40:58 UTC
Seems like power shortages:
>”The European Parliament has also faced blackouts this week due to energy consumption from cranking up its cooling system.”
dranudin · 2026-06-30 16:41:13 UTC
The A/C cannot keep up the load, due to the exteme heat. So they decided to just not cool one part of the building, to be able to keep cooling the other part ..
It is now interesting who was in which part ;)
mytailorisrich · 2026-06-30 17:05:40 UTC
If that's the case then the building's system was very badly designed...
alistairSH · 2026-06-30 17:30:36 UTC
That seems true - it's not a historic building - it was built in the mid- to late-1960s.
gwbas1c · 2026-06-30 17:56:13 UTC
It was designed for historical, pre-climate-change weather. (Or at least when those were in the know about climate change thought we'd solve it.)
mytailorisrich · 2026-06-30 18:00:08 UTC
There's probably a "Belgian joke" to be made if their AC is only designed to work when it isn't hot...
forgotaccount3 · 2026-06-30 17:13:45 UTC
Clearly those in floors 1->7 were less important and thus allowed to take the day off and/or work remotely, right?
alistairSH · 2026-06-30 17:29:16 UTC
It was 4pm on Friday, so yes, they were probably heading home already.
pgalvin · 2026-06-30 16:41:37 UTC
The article indicates they were unable to handle the increased electricity load, which caused blackouts.
Additionally, sometimes unnaturally high temperatures break AC systems put in place with poor planning. This is very common in UK supermarkets every summer.
ctoth · 2026-06-30 16:53:08 UTC
> unnaturally high temperatures
> poor planning.
> very common in UK supermarkets every summer.
What?
SiempreViernes · 2026-06-30 17:00:50 UTC
Global warming keeps making the temperature unnaturaly high, don't tell me you didn't hear about it.
ctoth · 2026-06-30 17:15:38 UTC
If it's every summer, how is it unnatural? If it's poor planning how is it every summer? There's poor planning and then there's ... what, forgetting that summer happens? It sounds to me like somebody sat down and penciled in some numbers and decided that "it makes less money to let it break?" which seems pretty weird when you consider second-order stuff (but it's not like people tend to do that anyway)
SiempreViernes · 2026-06-30 18:43:42 UTC
Come on, you expect me to believe you honestly have no contextual knowledge about the changing climate?
No, I think you are opting for disguising your full on climate change denial under a tattered veil of feigned ignorance.
wongarsu · 2026-06-30 16:42:21 UTC
Based on the little information provided the AC can't keep up. So they cut off the lower half of the building to provide better cooling to the other half
ceejayoz · 2026-06-30 16:44:24 UTC
Which, as heat rises, is probably reasonable.
clates · 2026-06-30 19:33:57 UTC
...... what?
This isn't your home with open stairwells and loose venting doorjams. This is a thirteen story office building with elevators and badged access easements.
ceejayoz · 2026-06-30 20:29:10 UTC
My dorm room was on the ninth floor of a nine floor building.
I assure you, heat passes through elevator shafts and floors just fine, and office buildings aren't usually built like a BSL-4 laboratory. If anything, they're typically less insulated than a regular old house.
basisword · 2026-06-30 16:43:11 UTC
Presumably the AC systems themselves couldn't operate in that extreme heat. A lot of grocery stores in the UK, which are icy cold usually, had major issues with AC and refrigeration systems failing - I think because a lot of the equipment is on the roof and exposed to the heat.
lstodd · 2026-06-30 16:50:01 UTC
AC systems don't quite care about direct sunlight, they are forced air heat exchangers. Now if the condenser (rooftop) side is undersized and therefore inadequate given elevated ambient air temperature all you can do is shut down a portion of evaporation side (the cold one) off, or the entire system just stops working.
Alternatively one can install water sprinkers on roofs like they do in China.
pkaye · 2026-06-30 16:58:51 UTC
Its pretty common to se the AC systems on the top of roofs on big buildings in the US. From what I read, exposing the AC condenser unit to the sun should have minimal impact. Air flow through the condenser unit matters the most. Perhaps they were undersized for the extreme heat now happening in the UK.
black3r · 2026-06-30 16:48:25 UTC
my guess is that the outdoor AC unit reached its maximum working temperature...
since we're not that used to extreme heat in EU, units with max working temperatures of 45 degrees Celsius are pretty common and the air around the AC unit is warmer than regular outdoors air, doubly so if they're placed on the ground and the glass from the building reflects some additional heat from the sun.
the risk of this was broadcasted in our local news for home AC owners when the forecast reached 40, as lots of apartments have the AC on partly glass-encased balconies, or on walls facing direct sunlight...
gwbas1c · 2026-06-30 17:59:40 UTC
Because a lot of electric grids are too old to handle the increased load.
To translate: When it's hot, air conditioners use more electricity. This is because they use more electricity because they have to work harder to keep a cool temperature.
The reason why electric grids are too old to handle the load is because:
Electric grids were built for smaller populations with the assumption that we'll build more as we make more babies; AND; electric grids weren't built to handle the temperature rise from climate change.
vovavili · 2026-06-30 16:41:00 UTC
All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.
dylan604 · 2026-06-30 16:45:23 UTC
This exact quote ran through my mind and I was tempted to post it.
papichulo2023 · 2026-06-30 17:01:18 UTC
This is a reference to Animal Farm, right?
felooboolooomba · 2026-06-30 18:08:26 UTC
No, Scrooge McDuck right before he sodomized Donald Duck.
lysace · 2026-06-30 16:42:44 UTC
Related and a little ironic: houses in northern Europe nowadays typically have "AC" in the form of air-to-air heat pumps that both can heat and cool. Houses in southern and central Europe dramatically lag behind in terms of adoption.
Comments
It's like satire. What is AC for if not extreme heat?
Just like heat pumps for heating in winter are amazing for our regular mild-ish winters, but if you get a really cold spell and it drops to -35C, it's just not going to work at all to a point where it might not even start - you could also say "well what's the point of a heating system that can't heat in extreme cold".
The extreme is the keyword.
Temperatures near 40C have been recorded in Paris dozens of times since the early 2000s. I don't think the winter temperature in Paris has ever dropped much below -20C, let alone -35C. So this isn't a very fair analogy.
Shutting down AC on floors 1 to 7 likely allows them to get better performance on floors 8 to 13
But I am unconvinced that AC manufacturers have different "sizing"... An AC unit is for hot places and the outdoor unit may be in a very hot spots with ambient easily above 40C.
Edit: Yes, AC systems for a whole building are different but still the system on the roof experiences the full Sun and very hot conditions, this isn't the issue. Perhaps they simply badly designed it so that it hasn't got the capacity to cool the whole building when it's actually hot so they prioritised (actually now I get that this is what you meant). Obviously it is easier to blame "weather conditions"...
By sizing I simply mean the number and capacity of roof units. Cooling an office building down by 8C is a lot easier than cooling it by 18C. I doubt half the roof units are shut down. Maybe some are, but most will have their output redirected to cooling the top half of the building
Edit: it'd be interesting to know how many buildings in Belgium have had the same issue.
It's like saying what's the point of having a house if you aren't safe in it during a tornado. It's an exceptional event. The problem is that these truly exceptional events which only happened once every 10 days for a day or two, are now becoming a norm. My own 12k BTU minisplit could cool my house down every summer, no problem, even down to 18C if I wanted it to. But in the recent heatwave it just can't keep up, there is more heat coming into the house than the system can remove.
Also 19 satellite antennae, if my count is right.
Discussion, common sense requires discussion. All you need to know about them in one sentence.
Edit: Downvoted because HN users don't understand living paycheque to paycheque. Talk about an echo chamber.
new mini splits are way more efficient than older systems as well.
insulation in older homes/buildings might be an issue though
Get a free standing unit like this: https://i.imgur.com/giewYeK.png
Shove the plastic tube outlet out of a window. End of installation. You're welcome.
Seriously why is this so difficult and what is this learned helplessness? You would rather be miserable than do literally anything?
If a tree falls in a forest and no one is around to hear it, does it make a sound?
If there is a balcony and you install it there, so nobody can see it from the street, is there an AC installed? Can you even use your balcony the way you want and place there big cardboard box if you need? Same thing. Facade is a one thing, balcony is something completely different, if you can't even use it, what's the point in having it.
I just watched a video where a person bought a £200 portable unit. He was using it in the UK and said he spent about £0.89 / day. And I'm assuming they won't use it for that many days a year.
Seems affordable enough for "most ordinary working people"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jOmzVWTH3xo
Other funny stuff:
- I haven't seen a single portable AC with a hose long enough to reach the window. Some come with tents and plastic things to seal the open window. The machine blows hot air out of the tube and air from outside is inevitable sucked in. If you could only hang the tube a few feet out of the window it wouldn't be sucking in the exhaust hot air back in.
- I've seen dozens with barely readable labels on the buttons in poorly contrasting colors. Some also have bright glowing leds next to the illegible text. Even if I switch on the lights (in the middle of the night) I cant read it because the leds are to bright. The buttons are spread out in some artistic arc with a nearly invisible fine line and lack a bump in the sticker they are made from.
- People here seem to love swamp chillers, some wet sponge or fabric with a fan pointed at it. Not sure what the ratio is, I think they roughly increase humidity by 10% for each 1C in temperature reduction with some favorable sweet spot above 90% humidity.
Then I see a video from an Amish dude hanging soaked bed sheets in front of the window explaining they don't have AC, they don't even have electricity, the wet sheets cut the temperature by 10 degrees apparently.
Bulgaria is one of the poorest EU countries and I have seen there way more ACs than in much richer Czechia or elsewhere, this is not about price at all
heck, even in Czechia I find much more ACs in some poor cities compared to the richest Prague, I've seen bigger AC ratio per apartment in my small poor ~40K hometown than in Prague, in our 40 units building in Prague I was the first one to have AC, after many years now followed by neighbor under me, 2 out of 40 units in relatively rich Prague, crazy (though it's true our top corner of the building is warmest from all apartments)
* "not technically feasible" - people talk about old buildings with oddly shaped windows
* "can't afford it" - as you see here. people talk about the units themselves and the electricity bills
* "our infrastructure can't handle it" - this has to do with things like grids overheating, failing
* "our infrastructure can't handle <the regulations>" - things like nuclear reactors in France not allowed to raise the temperature of rivers by another N degrees during a heat wave
* "it's bad for global warming" - a little late for that, probably should save lives first
literally hospitals in europe don't have AC throughout the entire building yet. global warming is really coming at them fast
Gas furnaces are 80%-98% efficient, heat pumps are 300-400%.
In comparison, fewer than 2k people die annually of heat in the US, well under 1 per 100k. And for symmetry, there are about 7k gun deaths annually in the EU, which is just slightly under 1 per 100k.
https://news.un.org/en/story/2024/08/1152766
In France these ideologues oppose A/C becauase it's evil: it makes us comfortable when we should be uncomfortable - if we are comfortable in an era of climate change, we'll only make it worse. And it's all America's fault anyway because of their emissions.
When do we vote out ideologues and have logical people in power?
https://app.electricitymaps.com/map/zone/DE/live/fifteen_min...
120GW of nameplate solar capacity is nothing to sneeze at even with the latitude challenge. That's more solar than almost all of California's energy generation combined, or most of the eastern United States.
>”The European Parliament has also faced blackouts this week due to energy consumption from cranking up its cooling system.”
Additionally, sometimes unnaturally high temperatures break AC systems put in place with poor planning. This is very common in UK supermarkets every summer.
> poor planning.
> very common in UK supermarkets every summer.
What?
No, I think you are opting for disguising your full on climate change denial under a tattered veil of feigned ignorance.
This isn't your home with open stairwells and loose venting doorjams. This is a thirteen story office building with elevators and badged access easements.
I assure you, heat passes through elevator shafts and floors just fine, and office buildings aren't usually built like a BSL-4 laboratory. If anything, they're typically less insulated than a regular old house.
Alternatively one can install water sprinkers on roofs like they do in China.
since we're not that used to extreme heat in EU, units with max working temperatures of 45 degrees Celsius are pretty common and the air around the AC unit is warmer than regular outdoors air, doubly so if they're placed on the ground and the glass from the building reflects some additional heat from the sun.
the risk of this was broadcasted in our local news for home AC owners when the forecast reached 40, as lots of apartments have the AC on partly glass-encased balconies, or on walls facing direct sunlight...
To translate: When it's hot, air conditioners use more electricity. This is because they use more electricity because they have to work harder to keep a cool temperature.
The reason why electric grids are too old to handle the load is because:
Electric grids were built for smaller populations with the assumption that we'll build more as we make more babies; AND; electric grids weren't built to handle the temperature rise from climate change.