Stop Romanticizing Sweat: Why Air Conditioning Is Becoming Essential in a Warming World
The Great Office Heat Delusion—and the Science of Human Performance
An evidence-driven op-ed and adaptation guide
There Are Two Seasons in the Modern Office
For most of the year, people go to work.
Then summer arrives.
Once temperatures climb above 30°C (86°F), many offices stop functioning as workplaces and become endurance competitions.
The windows are opened.
Someone immediately closes them.
Facilities wheel in another fan.
The coffee goes cold faster than your concentration.
Shirts stick to backs. Hair clings to necks. Tempers shorten. Brains slow down.
Everyone knows what the obvious solution is.
Yet in much of Europe—particularly Switzerland and Germany—even suggesting air conditioning often sparks ideological debates rather than practical discussions.
This isn't merely about comfort anymore.
It is about biology.
It is about economics.
And increasingly, it is about survival.
The Strange European Resistance to Cooling
Across Europe, heat has become political.
In France, record-breaking temperatures have fueled fierce arguments over whether widespread air conditioning represents climate denial or public health.
In Britain, workers have organized protests demanding legally enforceable workplace temperature limits.
Germany continues emphasizing passive cooling measures such as:
- Better insulation
- External shading
- Night ventilation
- Reducing internal heat sources
All are sensible.
All should be implemented.
But there is one uncomfortable reality:
Passive cooling has limits.
No amount of open windows can cool outside air that's still 33°C (91°F) at midnight.
The Human Body Was Never Designed for Modern Heat
Humans evolved in environments where nights cooled down.
Our bodies rely on that cooling.
When temperatures stay elevated day and night, everything begins to deteriorate.
Scientific research consistently shows rising temperatures affect:
- attention
- working memory
- decision making
- reaction speed
- mood
- learning
- creativity
- sleep quality
The brain is extraordinarily sensitive to heat.
Although it represents only about 2% of body weight, it consumes roughly 20% of our energy.
Keeping it cool is not optional.
It is necessary.
Productivity Starts Falling Earlier Than Most People Think
Occupational health research has repeatedly demonstrated that performance declines well before temperatures become dangerous.
Many workplace guidelines identify:
- Around 24–26°C (75–79°F) as close to optimal for office work.
- Above 26°C, concentration begins to decline.
- Around 28°C, measurable reductions in productivity become common.
- Beyond 30°C, errors increase significantly.
Complex cognitive tasks suffer first.
This explains why programming, engineering, writing, teaching, accounting and scientific work become disproportionately difficult during heatwaves.
Your brain is redirecting resources toward one priority:
keeping you alive.
Your Brain Has Better Things to Do Than Air Conditioning
When you're overheating, your body activates multiple cooling systems:
- sweating
- increased blood flow to the skin
- elevated heart rate
- greater water loss
- hormonal adjustments
These processes require energy.
Energy that would otherwise support:
- focus
- memory
- reasoning
- learning
Heat literally steals cognitive resources.
Sleep: The Forgotten Casualty
Perhaps the strongest argument for cooling isn't office productivity.
It's sleep.
Sleep scientists have known for decades that the body must lower its core temperature before deep sleep begins.
Ideal bedroom temperatures generally range between:
16–19°C (60–67°F)
When nights remain above 24°C:
- people fall asleep later
- wake more frequently
- experience less REM sleep
- spend less time in deep sleep
Poor sleep doesn't stay in the bedroom.
It follows you to work.
One bad night's sleep reduces:
- reaction time
- memory
- emotional regulation
- immune function
- learning ability
Heat creates a vicious cycle.
Hot days create hot nights.
Hot nights create exhausted workers.
Exhausted workers perform poorly the following day.
Heat Is Already Costing Billions
Heat is no longer merely a health issue.
It has become an economic one.
Across Europe, economists estimate enormous losses caused by reduced productivity.
Major sectors affected include:
- construction
- logistics
- agriculture
- healthcare
- manufacturing
- transportation
- office work
These losses stem from:
- slower work
- increased mistakes
- higher absenteeism
- equipment failures
- reduced concentration
Some regional estimates already project annual economic losses reaching hundreds of millions of Swiss francs from increasingly frequent heat events.
Germany has similarly been warned that recurring heatwaves could generate tens of billions of euros in cumulative economic damage over the coming years if adaptation remains inadequate.
Climate adaptation is becoming economic policy.
Air Conditioning Changed Civilization
Singapore's founding Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew once called air conditioning one of the greatest inventions of the twentieth century.
He argued it transformed civilization itself.
That may sound exaggerated.
It isn't.
Modern financial centers like:
- Singapore
- Dubai
- Hong Kong
depend on climate-controlled environments.
Without reliable cooling, high-performance knowledge economies struggle to function in tropical climates.
Cooling didn't merely improve comfort.
It enabled modern economies.
But Isn't Air Conditioning Bad for the Planet?
Yes.
And no.
The criticism is justified.
Air conditioners:
- consume electricity
- increase peak energy demand
- can leak potent greenhouse gases if poorly maintained
- contribute to urban heat through waste heat
Poorly designed cooling systems absolutely worsen climate change.
However...
Modern systems are dramatically more efficient than older ones.
When powered by renewable electricity and set responsibly (around 25–26°C rather than 19°C), their environmental footprint declines substantially.
The question is no longer:
Air conditioning or no air conditioning?
It is:
How do we cool intelligently?
Adaptation Is Smarter Than Ideology
Climate change has already happened.
More warming is locked into Earth's climate system.
Mitigation remains essential.
But adaptation is now equally unavoidable.
That means accepting uncomfortable truths.
Some technologies that consume energy may simultaneously save:
- lives
- productivity
- healthcare costs
- infrastructure
- economic stability
The perfect solution doesn't exist.
Only better trade-offs.
The Ultimate Heat Adaptation Guide
1. Build Before You Cool
Always reduce heat gain first.
Prioritize:
- exterior shutters
- reflective blinds
- insulated roofs
- green roofs
- deciduous trees
- cross ventilation
- thermal insulation
Every degree prevented is one degree you don't need to cool.
2. Cool People Before Buildings
Often it's cheaper to cool humans than entire structures.
Use:
- ceiling fans
- desk fans
- cooling towels
- breathable clothing
- hydration stations
- shaded workspaces
Air movement dramatically improves thermal comfort.
3. Use Air Conditioning Strategically
Avoid turning buildings into refrigerators.
Recommended settings:
- Offices: 24–26°C
- Bedrooms: 18–20°C
- Hospitals: as medically appropriate
- Data centers: equipment-specific
Lower isn't always better.
4. Sleep Like Your Life Depends On It
Because it does.
Improve sleep by:
- cooling bedrooms
- blackout curtains
- evening showers
- lightweight bedding
- limiting alcohol
- reducing evening screen time
- using fans if AC isn't available
Sleep is your body's repair mechanism.
Protect it.
5. Rethink Working Hours
Countries with centuries of hot climates already understand this.
Possible adaptations include:
- earlier shifts
- remote work
- afternoon breaks
- flexible schedules
Working with biology is cheaper than fighting it.
6. Hydrate Before You're Thirsty
Even mild dehydration reduces:
- memory
- mood
- reaction time
Don't wait until thirst appears.
Older adults often experience thirst less intensely.
7. Protect Vulnerable Groups
Extreme heat disproportionately affects:
- older adults
- infants
- pregnant women
- outdoor workers
- people with chronic illnesses
- low-income households without cooling
Adaptation must prioritize those at greatest risk.
8. Design Cooler Cities
Urban planners increasingly recommend:
- more trees
- reflective pavements
- green roofs
- parks
- permeable surfaces
- shaded sidewalks
- water features
Cities can be redesigned to reduce the urban heat island effect rather than simply air-condition every building.
9. Upgrade Buildings for the Climate We Actually Have
Europe's housing stock was largely designed to retain heat.
Future renovations should prioritize:
- external insulation
- heat-reflective materials
- automated shading
- passive cooling
- heat pumps capable of reversible cooling where appropriate
10. Stop Treating Heat Like Bad Weather
Heat is a natural disaster.
It kills more people globally than many storms, floods, or cold spells in some years.
Yet we still often treat heat as an inconvenience rather than a public health emergency.
That mindset must change.
The Future Will Be Cooler—or Harder
Nobody is arguing for American shopping malls kept at 18°C in the middle of August.
Nobody wants restaurants so cold that diners need sweaters.
But there is a vast difference between wasteful overcooling and refusing to cool at all.
Modern civilization already depends on temperature control.
Hospitals rely on it.
Laboratories rely on it.
Food systems rely on it.
Data centers rely on it.
Why should the human brain—the most valuable machine in any economy—be expected to operate at peak performance while slowly overheating?
The science is no longer in dispute.
Our bodies need cooler temperatures to sleep well.
Our brains need cooler temperatures to think clearly.
Our economies need people who can concentrate.
The real debate is no longer whether cooling has costs.
It does.
The question is whether refusing to adapt will cost us even more.
As Europe warms, the future belongs not to those who deny the heat—but to those who learn to live intelligently with it.
yours truly,
Adaptation-Guide


