London’s risk from rising temperatures

Open

913 Londoners have responded

A very hazy view of London's skyline, featuring the Gherkin and the Walkie Talkie

Discussions

Discussion | Coping with hot weather in London

User Image for
Added by Talk London

The summer of 2022 saw temperatures above 40°C, the highest ever recorded in England. Climate change could bring hotter, drier summers in London, with longer, more intense heatwaves.

City Hall’s Climate Adaptation team wants to hear your experience to help inform London’s first Heat Risk Delivery Plan. 

Join the conversation 

 Thinking back to the heatwave of 2022: 

  • How did you cope with the heat in London?  
  • What helped you stay cool at home or while you were out and about? 
  • What made it better, and what made it worse?  

Thinking of this summer:  

  • What, if anything, are you doing differently to cope with the heat in London? 
  • What, if anything, does London need to help you cope with the heat? 

Please share as much detail as you can. Eleanor and Annette from City Hall’s Climate Adaptation team will be reading your comments and joining in.  

About the action plan

The London Heat Risk Delivery Plan will set out the roles and responsibilities our city needs to manage heat risk. The recommendation for this action plan came out of last year’s London Climate Resilience Review.  

Between March and September 2025, Londoners and stakeholders are invited to help inform the action plan. Read more on our background page.

 

Open


Want to add a comment?

New here? Join Talk London, City Hall's online community where you can have your say on London's biggest issues.

Join Talk London

Already have an account?

Log into your account
Comments (252)

This comment has been pinned
Avatar for -

Great to see so many comments about living with extreme heat in London. Thanks for taking the time to add your comments. This is much appreciated to inform what more London needs to do to manage extreme heat in today's changing climate.

Avatar for - American pika

I agree

Avatar for - Vaquita

Agreed alarmism is not helpful during a crisis. Climate change however is real and a look at stats from experts across the globe confirms it 

Show full comment

Agreed alarmism is not helpful during a crisis. Climate change however is real and a look at stats from experts across the globe confirms it 

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

Agree.

Avatar for - Monarch butterfly

How about taking Thames Water back? Thrice water is being cut off because some pipes burst. Privatized water company not reinvesting on infrastructure and blaming on old assets. Water is a necessity for humans and should never be privatised...

Show full comment

How about taking Thames Water back? Thrice water is being cut off because some pipes burst. Privatized water company not reinvesting on infrastructure and blaming on old assets. Water is a necessity for humans and should never be privatised for profits in the first place.

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

Not one single answer related to the provision of air conditioning or the Mayor’s attempts to prevent and deter new builds from installing air conditioning. New builds are designed to keep heat in and are dangerously hot in the summer, even...

Show full comment

Not one single answer related to the provision of air conditioning or the Mayor’s attempts to prevent and deter new builds from installing air conditioning. New builds are designed to keep heat in and are dangerously hot in the summer, even when there are no heatwaves. The Mayor and his team are failing Londoners. They must do something to help those in new builds to keep their flats cool. Paying lip service to this issue by discussing ridiculous and ineffective options, and totally ignoring the need for air conditioning is sadly not unexpected. Shame on the Mayor and his team. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Pangolin

Insulation, ventilation and working with the sun are key. 

I live in a tiny, well-insulated, basement flat, which is easily aired by opening doors and windows. Plus I have a small but leafy garden which cools the air.  Only downside is...

Show full comment

Insulation, ventilation and working with the sun are key. 

I live in a tiny, well-insulated, basement flat, which is easily aired by opening doors and windows. Plus I have a small but leafy garden which cools the air.  Only downside is occasional humidity. Wish I had permission for a heat pump as then I wouldn't need my dehumidifier. 

Many urban new builds have large windows, glass cladding and inadequate ventilation. And snobby rules about not drying clothes on the balcony!  Shutters, solar panels and green walls/roofs should be mandatory and outdoor laundry-drying encouraged.  More vegetation and less heat-holding concrete. Grey water soakaways to irrigate the vegetation and save energy on water purification.

Air con in public spaces is usually too cold imo and uses loads of electricity.  

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Adelie penguin

As someone on SSRIs, I don't think public officials take to account just how bad heatwaves are for people on medication. It makes it unbearable and should be listed as vulnerable people that need extra support 

Show full comment

As someone on SSRIs, I don't think public officials take to account just how bad heatwaves are for people on medication. It makes it unbearable and should be listed as vulnerable people that need extra support 

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

I have just been searching online for the best kind of blinds for reflecting sunlight and radiant heat. It is not that easy. The usual 'thermal' blind fabric is silvery coloured but not very efficient at keeping heat and light out. The...

Show full comment

I have just been searching online for the best kind of blinds for reflecting sunlight and radiant heat. It is not that easy. The usual 'thermal' blind fabric is silvery coloured but not very efficient at keeping heat and light out. The blinds that do reflect solar light and heat are prohibitively high cost.  Maybe the GLA and Mayor should engage with blind manufacturers and suppliers about improving thermal and solar blinds, while keeping costs down so that ordinary people can afford them. The information about these blinds could be more accurate and detailed too. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

Change council planning conditions to include mandatory white roofs, solar panels and green roofs. Is it India where painting roofs white has made a significant difference to keeping homes habitable in the increasing temperatures? Mayor...

Show full comment

Change council planning conditions to include mandatory white roofs, solar panels and green roofs. Is it India where painting roofs white has made a significant difference to keeping homes habitable in the increasing temperatures? Mayor Khan should work with council planning departments on new measures in planning requirements, so that cooler buildings are built.

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

City Hall, the Mayor - the climate resilience and heat risk plans need to be bigger and bolder, much bolder. Take a good look at what other cities do around the world. Developers and anyone refurbishing or building needs to take a radically...

Show full comment

City Hall, the Mayor - the climate resilience and heat risk plans need to be bigger and bolder, much bolder. Take a good look at what other cities do around the world. Developers and anyone refurbishing or building needs to take a radically different approach to the usual one that is producing endless inadequate buildings, badly thought-out. This must be dealt with, now. HAs and council must retrofit insulation and other measures into old blocks of flats and houses. Residents must be allowed to have air con and heat pumps. The air con etc industry needs a huge push to develop more efficient and quieter equipment that can be used in flats. Time to get a proper grip on making London habitable for climate change. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - American pika

I have no problems in the heat during the day time, except for on the tube. Nights can be terrible when its hot though. 

I think there should be public water drinking facilities eveywhere for everyone.

Show full comment

I have no problems in the heat during the day time, except for on the tube. Nights can be terrible when its hot though. 

I think there should be public water drinking facilities eveywhere for everyone.

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

The most miserable part of living in London in a heatwave is how extremely uncomfortable public transport is, yet the survey didn’t provide an opportunity to discuss this. Both tube trains & buses are at times unbearable, & I’m sure close...

Show full comment

The most miserable part of living in London in a heatwave is how extremely uncomfortable public transport is, yet the survey didn’t provide an opportunity to discuss this. Both tube trains & buses are at times unbearable, & I’m sure close to being unsafe because of the heat & the effect on people’s health. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Monarch butterfly

I would concur - the added problem of services being delayed and cancelled because of heat disruption on the railways makes the potential dangers worse. 

I was once trapped in an overcrowded Clapham Junction Station corridor trying to change...

Show full comment

I would concur - the added problem of services being delayed and cancelled because of heat disruption on the railways makes the potential dangers worse. 

I was once trapped in an overcrowded Clapham Junction Station corridor trying to change trains and eventually squeezed into an over-full carriage to end my journey.  It felt at the time like it might be my last!  And that was about 10 years ago! 

Now retired, I don't use public transport except during very quiet/cool times during the heat of the summer months. In fact, I stay at home as much as possible and use the corner shop for essentials.

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Staghorn coral

Humidity has a big effect on how we feel. The same temperature in dryer climates is bearable.

However from what people have written, it gives the impression that there is still a lot to be learnt, so that one can acclimatise to the situation...

Show full comment

Humidity has a big effect on how we feel. The same temperature in dryer climates is bearable.

However from what people have written, it gives the impression that there is still a lot to be learnt, so that one can acclimatise to the situation somewhat.

Perhaps evening classes, group discussions, more intense publicity both online and in paper format would help.  

People especially elders because of their age are at a disadvantage as to that of youngsters, who as they will have grown up in this situation it will be part of their life, similar to their use of computers.

Also lessons on the subject should be included in their timetables.

The learning also appears to be needed with the people who make the decisions as to how we live and how to make it more endurable.

More control of making decisions in this matter should be limited to those of a younger age who will have more years to live through the above position. Older people will still able to have their say, but only as consultants.

Based on all the suggestions made by others it would appear that implementation of anything acceptable should be done more quickly.

Don’t leave everything to experts in the matter and expect them always to come up with a solution.

Looking at the internet there are currently about 8.2 billion people living on this planet.

Therefore, everyone should be asked to think about the current situation and put forward any suggestion even though it might appear to be stupid.

If you don’t think about something it will never happen.  

 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Vaquita

I go out as little as possible when the heat goes above 30 as I am nearly 75 and vulnerable. I keep windows closed and have a curtain on the window that gets the sun. I keep my fan on during the day and early part of the night. I did this...

Show full comment

I go out as little as possible when the heat goes above 30 as I am nearly 75 and vulnerable. I keep windows closed and have a curtain on the window that gets the sun. I keep my fan on during the day and early part of the night. I did this in 2022 and will do this again this year. There does need to be more fans in tube stations and on the tube. And on the buses. More planting is needed and more white painting on houses and flats.

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Staghorn coral

I think we need to improve the public space sustainable planting and  water retention. I noticed  this week in a sudden storm, in a local park, water running off path but not into water storage area   

Trees need to be planted with open bowl...

Show full comment

I think we need to improve the public space sustainable planting and  water retention. I noticed  this week in a sudden storm, in a local park, water running off path but not into water storage area   

Trees need to be planted with open bowl for mulching and water retention as an example.

Parks could be used for garden inspiration of better planting for drought. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Staghorn coral

One more point which occurs to me is that it’s cheap and easy to have permeable hard standing (I’m thinking of front gardens and ground level car parks). It’s been around for decades, in fact there are several versions including rubber...

Show full comment

One more point which occurs to me is that it’s cheap and easy to have permeable hard standing (I’m thinking of front gardens and ground level car parks). It’s been around for decades, in fact there are several versions including rubber hexagons made from recycled car tyres. Any material with holes in it will reduce runoff, slow water flow and flooding and hopefully take the pressure off the street drains. Thames Water  have not helped us Londoners, in fact they have done the opposite: water provision should be about conservation and management, not just delivery). 

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Staghorn coral

Q1it is a law in LLondon that this should happen since 1980s, but is never implemented except in conservation areas where the specific planning regs require it, such as ours.

Avatar for -

Doesn't tyre 'rubber' leach into the environment, in a damaging way?

Avatar for - Staghorn coral

Yes it does, I think it’s a different formulation of rubber, and of course it’s not going round on an abrasive surface…. The point is to use something permeable, I guess planks of wood would serve the same purpose, except they get slippery...

Show full comment

Yes it does, I think it’s a different formulation of rubber, and of course it’s not going round on an abrasive surface…. The point is to use something permeable, I guess planks of wood would serve the same purpose, except they get slippery in the rain.

Show less of comment

Load more
Avatar for - Polar bear

I would like to see some proper work on greening streets even if it costs a few parking spaces. There a long street near me (Priors Croft, E17) that used to have trees. Several died from fungal diseases. Several more were ‘accidentally’...

Show full comment

I would like to see some proper work on greening streets even if it costs a few parking spaces. There a long street near me (Priors Croft, E17) that used to have trees. Several died from fungal diseases. Several more were ‘accidentally’ reversed into and died because the street has pavement parking. The contractors just paved all the tree holes over when redoing the pavement. It’s a furnace now. The council could easily shift some parking back on to the street (it’s more than wide enough) and remove a small number of total spaces in order to create proper plantings: trees plus shrubs and grasses protected by stone setts that would stop any car trying to back into it. The bottom of the street has also started to flood regularly thanks to extreme rainfall, so these be planting could be used to absorb that too. I don’t know if they need 50% of residents to support this activity (it’s public space and climate mitigation so I don’t see why they would) but it’s such a no-brained and yet the contractors just show up and tarmac everything because it’s not part of the job.  

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Pangolin

Vegetation makes such a difference to the heat - convection and evaporative cooling. Plus beauty and food and cover for wildlife (if appropriate plants are chosen). 

There were several depaving projects in the early noughties where slabs...

Show full comment

Vegetation makes such a difference to the heat - convection and evaporative cooling. Plus beauty and food and cover for wildlife (if appropriate plants are chosen). 

There were several depaving projects in the early noughties where slabs were removed and wildflower-rich verges established - what happened?

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Polar bear

We have been looking ways to use greenery to cool the house by keeping the sun from hitting the glass and brick of our terraced house. So we have star jasmine on a trellis growing up the east side and wisteria growing up the rear wall and...

Show full comment

We have been looking ways to use greenery to cool the house by keeping the sun from hitting the glass and brick of our terraced house. So we have star jasmine on a trellis growing up the east side and wisteria growing up the rear wall and along a trellis above the window — both of these put the glazing and brick in shade during the summer but have no effect during the winter (so light still comes in). We have also planted some trees further away but they will have less effect and take longer to be useful. 

Will probably have to add external shutters to the skylight and some of the top floor windows soon. And was thinking about solar panels on the roof to keep the sun from warming the tiles and rubber. 

It’s basically all ideas you’d get from a trip to Spain or France except we don’t want to paint the brick white. 

Show less of comment

Avatar for -

I work for a large organisation which employs thousands of people in London. My office building was built just after WW2 and some of the offices have been retrofitted with air con. Notwithstanding this and some of the other problems...

Show full comment

I work for a large organisation which employs thousands of people in London. My office building was built just after WW2 and some of the offices have been retrofitted with air con. Notwithstanding this and some of the other problems discussed here about coping in heatwaves, there is no information given out by my organisation about how to keep our buildings cool.  Nearly everyone believes that opening  windows to get a through draught is whats best when actually, and especially if you have aircon, closing all the blinds, windows and interconnecting doors and keeping in the cool air is what’s best. Hot air will always move to cold so if you have the windows open all youre doing is bringing in the super heated outside air into your office / room.  There is very little information out there in the public domain. A simple, timely education piece would go a long way into helping people cope with excessive heat.  

Show less of comment

Avatar for - Rhino

Living in a top floor flat in a new build block there is no ventilation in hot summers, you cannot get a cross breeze with open windows as they are all on the same side of the building and none of the windows open in communal areas. I lived...

Show full comment

Living in a top floor flat in a new build block there is no ventilation in hot summers, you cannot get a cross breeze with open windows as they are all on the same side of the building and none of the windows open in communal areas. I lived in Australia for a while so am familiar with the idea to keep windows and blinds closed when its hotter outside than in but still my flat is 31 degrees when I come in from work. I have bought an air conditioner which helps a bit but in a small flat takes up a lot of space and is expensive to run and buy so many would not have that option. Its a housing association flat so I cannot make permanent alterations. Housing associations and developers must be forced to improve ventilation and summer cooling. I use my fan/air con from May to Sept so a significant amount of the year. 

Show less of comment


Timeline

STAGE: Evidence gathering

Launch of the London Climate Resilience Review

Happened

London’s changing climate

Happened
-

Londoners have responded 927 times

Find out more
STAGE: Programme launched

London Climate Resilience Review is published with a recommendation to create the London Heat Risk Delivery Plan

Happening in future
STAGE: You said, we did

Report on impacts of climate change published

Happened
Read our update
STAGE: Evidence gathering

London Heat Risk Delivery Plan programme launches

Happened
STAGE: Evidence gathering

March-September 2025: Stakeholder engagement to help inform the London Heat Risk Delivery Plan (including here on Talk London)

Happened

Shaping London's Heat Plan

Happening now
-

Londoners have responded 892 times

Start the survey
STAGE: Programme design

September 2025 - March 2026: Drafting of the London Heat Risk Delivery Plan

Happened
STAGE: Programme launched

Spring 2026: Publication of the London Heat Risk Delivery Plan

Happened