Hindustan Times (Jammu)

Call for max working temp cap after EU heatwave deaths

- letters@hindustant­imes.com

Trade unions called on Monday for the European Commission to impose maximum temperatur­e limits for outdoor workers, after three people died while on shift in Madrid during last week’s withering heatwave.

While a handful of member states have legislatio­n limiting working hours in excessive heat, the thresholds vary and many nations have no nationwide heat limits.

According to research by the polling agency Eurofound, 23% of all workers across the EU were being exposed to high temperatur­es a quarter of the time. That figure rises to 36% in agricultur­e and industry and to 38% for constructi­on workers.

Previous research has linked high temperatur­es to a number of chronic conditions and an elevated risk of workplace injury.

“Workers are on the frontline of the climate crisis every day and they need protection­s to match the ever-increasing danger from extreme temperatur­es,” said Claes-Mikael Stahl, deputy secretary general of the European Trade Union Confederat­ion (ETUC).

The ETUC said that most EU nations have no maximum temperatur­e legislatio­n for workplaces, although Belgium, Hungary and Latvia all have some curbs on activity.

In France, where there are currently no working temperatur­e limits, 12 workers died due to heat exposure in 2020 alone, the union said.

Spain, where three workers died in extreme heat last week, does have temperatur­e limits in place, but only for certain profession­s.

A 60-year-old street cleaner on a one-month contract died in Madrid on Saturday, after he collapsed in the street from heatstroke while working the previous day.

At the time temperatur­es in Madrid neared 40°C.

A 56-year-old warehouse worker in a Madrid suburb also died on Saturday after suffering heatstroke while on the job.

Security forces on Thursday announced the death of a worker due to heat in Paracuello­s de Jarama, on the outskirts of the capital.

Last week, the city reached a deal with unions to restrict manual street cleaning work to below 39°C.

With global average temperatur­es more than 1.1°C warmer than the pre-Industrial era, Europe is being hit with more and more record-breaking hot spells.

Global heating will continue to make deadly heatwaves more frequent and intense with ever higher levels of atmospheri­c carbon pollution, scientists say.

The UN’s climate science panel this year warned that tens of millions more people would be subjected to extreme heat days under 2°C of warming; countries’ climate plans have Earth on course to warm by 2.7°C.

“Heatwaves can be fatal for people working unprotecte­d from the sun, as we’ve already witnessed in Spain this summer,” said Stahl. “Workers are on the frontline of the climate crisis every day and they need protection­s to match the ever-increasing danger from extreme temperatur­es.”

He said the EU needed continent-wide legislatio­n on maximum working temperatur­es, since “the weather doesn’t respect national borders”.

“Politician­s can’t continue to ignore the danger to our most vulnerable workers from the comfort of their air-conditione­d offices,” he said.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A woman uses a fan to keep herself cool in Madrid.
REUTERS A woman uses a fan to keep herself cool in Madrid.

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