Santa Fe New Mexican

India’s tips for Britain

- Mihir Sharma is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist and a senior fellow at the Observer Research Foundation in New Delhi.

London was burning earlier this week. So many blazes erupted during the recent heatwave that the city’s fire brigades had their busiest day since Hitler sent his V-2s screaming across the Channel. The runways at Heathrow began to melt when temperatur­es crossed 104 degrees Fahrenheit while embattled railway companies feared that train tracks would buckle in the heat. Britain, like the rest of Europe, is woefully unprepared for a warming world.

Here in New Delhi, it’s barely 30 degrees, or 86 degrees, outside. The monsoon has finally arrived, making this parched part of the world habitable once again.

Neverthele­ss we, too, have suffered from the heat more than is usual. This is what’s supposed to happen, regular as clockwork: First, heavy rain clouds gather over the Indian Ocean and are pulled up toward the subcontine­nt as it begins to bake under the hot sun of late April. Then, by the end of May, the clouds burst over the southern tip of the peninsula; less than a fortnight later, on June 10, the great port cities of Mumbai and Kolkata receive their first sustained showers.

The monsoon then proceeds regally up the Gangetic plain until it brings relief to Delhi in the last days of the month. While northwest India may feel unlivable during high summer, summer is only supposed to last two months or so.

Now the monsoon tends to get lost. This year, Delhi should have seen constant showers for the first 10 days of June. Instead we received less than an inch of rain.

Cherished weather patterns, expectatio­ns built up over generation­s, are all being destroyed by climate change. But at least we in India sense what we are in for. We know what extreme heat can do to a person. In response, you build houses with thick walls, small windows and high ceilings to keep cool. You drink as much water as you can. If at all possible, you don’t go out when the sun is high in the sky. Englishmen, as Noel Coward famously pointed out, don’t have quite the same respect for the midday sun.

There’s a lot about how Europeans live that will have to change as the continent faces summer days that will feel more like South Asia than the Swiss Alps. Clothes, for one. A month with daytime temperatur­es regularly over 80 degrees Fahrenheit, isn’t one in which you should be wearing a nice suit as you walk to the office.

People will change their habits when their doctors tell them to — and, fortunatel­y, the National Health Service remains Britain’s most trusted institutio­n. The NHS has guidance out telling Britons to drink more water and to walk in the shade.

But the NHS will have to prepare for more than that. Under businessas-usual scenarios, the aedes aegypti mosquito will migrate unhindered to northern Europe and have two or three months of perfect weather to spread diseases such as dengue and chikunguny­a — which we in India had hardly heard of a few decades ago but which are now endemic. In the United States, the Deep South is in even more danger: The United Nations Environmen­t Programme has warned the region might be at risk of malaria outbreaks in coming decades.

Then there’s the real estate stock. New-build completion­s in the United Kingdom have only returned about to the level they were before the financial crisis. That in itself is less than half what they were at the peak of British house-building, back in the mid-1960s.

It’s wonderful how many countries in Europe have worked hard to minimize the demolition of old buildings and relax change-of-use regulation­s to bring them into the market. Yet formerly cold-weather countries can’t afford too much sentimenta­lity. With the climate changing, they will need many more new buildings that are designed for extremes of heat, too.

Growing up in Bengal the cemeteries provided enough evidence of what happens to people who refuse to change their ways when confronted with extreme heat. Graveyards were full of British colonists who died young.

One austere Danish visitor explained why: “It is true that many Englishmen die here very suddenly, but in my opinion the fault is chiefly their own: They eat much succulent food. … They drink very strong Portugal wines, at the hottest time of day. … In addition they wear, as in Europe, tight-fitting clothes.”

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