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Europe Heatwave Is Melting Roads | Climate Crisis We Can No Longer Ignore | Europe Heatwave Explainer
Europe heatwave is melting roads as record-breaking temperatures sweep the continent. Is this the climate crisis we can no longer ignore? Watch the full explainer.

The Europe heatwave is melting roads, disrupting transport, damaging infrastructure, and forcing governments across the continent to issue emergency warnings as temperatures soar to dangerous levels. From highways buckling under extreme heat to rail networks slowing down and wildfires spreading across multiple countries, the Europe heatwave has become one of the biggest global stories of the year. Experts say the climate crisis we can no longer ignore is unfolding in real time, with millions experiencing the devastating impact of extreme weather.


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Transcript
00:05This is One India Explainer. Imagine walking outside and finding the road beneath your feet
00:11turning soft. Imagine train tracks bending in the heat. Imagine cooking an omelette not on a stove
00:18but by simply placing a frying pan under the afternoon sun. It may sound like a scene from
00:25a science fiction movie or possibly from the central Indian set-up. But this is Europe in the
00:32summer of 2026. From France and Germany to Italy and the United Kingdom, a relentless heat wave has
00:40pushed temperatures to levels that many countries were never built to handle. Roads are melting,
00:47rail services are being suspended, hospitals are overwhelmed and thousands of people are struggling
00:53to cope. But this isn't just about hot summer. It is a warning. A warning that climate change is no
01:01longer a future threat. It is happening now and perhaps the biggest question is if this is happening
01:08in Europe today, what does it mean for the rest of the world tomorrow? Europe has always experienced
01:18summers. But what is happening today is different. Across France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland and
01:25the UK, temperatures have crossed records that stood for decades. Some places have recorded temperatures
01:32touching or crossing 40 degrees Celsius. On the ground, road surfaces are becoming much hotter,
01:39often crossing 60 degrees Celsius. That is hot enough to soften asphalt.
01:45In Germany, parts of tram networks had to be shut down because the material around the rail tracks
01:52melted and hardened again, making the tracks unsafe. In France, roads have developed ripples and cracks
01:59as the bitumen holding the asphalt together began to soften. Meanwhile in Italy, several cities have been
02:07placed under the highest heat alert, with authorities advising people to avoid stepping outdoors during the
02:14afternoon. This isn't simply uncomfortable weather. Its infrastructure beginning to fail.
02:25Many viewers may wonder, India routinely experiences temperatures above 45 degrees Celsius.
02:31So why aren't Indian highways melting every summer? The answer lies in the engine wing. Roads are not built the
02:39same
02:40everywhere. European roads were designed decades ago for a completely different climate. Their winters are
02:46long, cold and snowy. Their roads must survive freezing temperatures without tracking. That is why they use softer
02:56grades of bitumen that remain flexible in winter. India, on the other hand, faces the opposite challenge. Here, the roads
03:03are
03:03designed to withstand months of scorching heat. Highways use harder grades of bitumen and in many cases, concrete
03:11surfaces that remain stable even when temperatures soar. In simple words, European roads were built to survive
03:19snow. Indian roads are built to survive the sun. But as Europe gets hotter, yesterday's engineering is no longer
03:28enough for today's climatic challenge. The melting roads may grab headlines, but the real crisis is unfolding
03:39elsewhere. Inside hospitals. Across France, emergency rooms have reported a sharp rise in patients suffering from
03:47heat stroke, dehydration, breathing problems, and heart-related illnesses. Older adults are among the most
03:54vulnerable. Many homes across Europe were built to keep heat inside during winter. Ironically, those same
04:02buildings now trap dangerous heat during summer. Unlike many American or Gulf homes, millions of European
04:10homes still lack air conditioning because, until recently, they simply didn't need it. Hospitals themselves
04:17are struggling. Medical equipment is overheating. Cooling systems are under pressure. Doctors and nurses
04:24are treating more patients while working in increasingly difficult conditions. Heat is no longer just a
04:32better story. It is becoming a public health emergency. Social media is filled with dramatic videos, people
04:44frying eggs on pans left under the open sun, chocolate melting in minutes, plastic objects warping, road
04:51markings peeling away. While these clips attract millions of views, they also reveal something unsettling.
04:59Many people are treating this like entertainment, but scientists see something very different. They see decades of
05:07warnings becoming a reality now.
05:14So the big question is, did this happen suddenly? The answer is no. Climate change didn't begin this
05:22year or last year. For decades, scientists have warned that increasing greenhouse gases would gradually warm the
05:30planet. Coal, oil, natural gas, industrial pollution, deforestation, rapid urbanization. Every year, humans have added
05:40billions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. Think of Earth's atmosphere like a blanket. A thin
05:48blanket keeps us warm. But if you keep adding thicker and thicker blankets, eventually, the heat cannot escape. That's
05:56exactly what is happening. The planet is trapping more heat than it releases. As a result, heat waves become
06:04longer, more intense, more frequent. This isn't simply hot weather. It is climate change amplifying natural
06:13weather patterns.
06:18Perhaps the most worrying part is not the heat also. It's our response to it. For years, climate reports have
06:26warned governments. Scientists have presented evidence. Young activists have marched. International agreements
06:33have been signed. Yet global emissions continue to rise. Many countries still depend heavily on fossil fuels.
06:41Forests continue to disappear. Cities continue expanding with concrete replacing green spaces. Every air
06:49air conditioner that runs on coal-generated electricity helps us survive today's heat, but also contributes to
06:57tomorrow's warming if the energy isn't clean. It becomes a vicious cycle. Nature is sending warning after warning.
07:06The question is, are we listening?
07:12Can we still change the course? Someone would think. The answer is yes. But time matters. Governments need cleaner energy,
07:22smarter cities, more trees, climate resilient roads, hospitals prepared for extreme weather, early warning systems.
07:31In the future, individuals also have a role. Saving energy, using public transport where possible, reducing waste, planting trees,
07:41supporting sustainable policies. No single action will solve climate change just in a day.
07:48But millions of small actions together can make a big difference.
07:56If global temperatures continue rising, today's European heat wave could become tomorrow's normal.
08:04Roads will need rebuilding. Railways will require redesigning. Cities will need more green spaces.
08:11Healthcare systems will face increasing pressure. Insurance costs will rise. Agriculture will suffer.
08:19Water shortages may become more common. Climate change is no longer just an environmental issue.
08:26It is an economic issue, a health issue, a national security issue, and ultimately a human issue.
08:34Europe's melting roads are not the story. They are the symptom. The real story is that climate in our cities,
08:41economies, societies were built for is changing faster than many of them can adapt.
08:47The good news is that the future has not been written yet. The choice we make today about energy, consumption,
08:56technology and conservation will determine whether tomorrow's summers remain survivable.
09:02Because the biggest danger is not the roads are melting. The bigger danger is becoming so
09:08so used to these warnings that we stop seeing them as warnings at all.
09:14Thank you, ребята.
09:17We're going to see you.
09:17We're going to see you in the next 2 weeks,
09:18We're going to see you in the next 2 weeks.
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