‘Daunting
but doable’: Europe urged to prepare for 3C of global heating
Advisory
board member says Europe already paying price for lack of preparation but
adapting is ‘not rocket science’
Ajit
Niranjan
Mon 16
Feb 2026 23.01 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2026/feb/16/europe-climate-advisory-board-3c-global-heating
Keeping
Europe safe from extreme weather “is not rocket science”, a top researcher has
said, as the EU’s climate advisory board urges countries to prepare for a
catastrophic 3C of global heating.
Maarten
van Aalst, a member of the European Scientific Advisory Board on Climate Change
(ESABCC), said the continent was already “paying a price” for its lack of
preparation but that adapting to a hotter future was in part “common sense and
low-hanging fruit”.
“It is a
daunting task, but at the same time quite a doable task. It’s not rocket
science,” said van Aalst, who used to lead the climate centre at the
International Red Cross and Red Crescent and is now the director general of the
Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute (KNMI).
The
ESABCC describes current efforts to adapt to rising temperatures as
“insufficient, largely incremental [and] often coming too late” in a new report
that advises officials to prepare for a world 2.8-3.3C hotter than
preindustrial levels by 2100.
Such a
dramatic rise in temperatures – the prospect of which has left some leading
climate scientists feeling hopeless – would be double the level of global
heating that world leaders promised to aim for when they signed the Paris
agreement in 2015. The ESABCC recommended officials stress-test even hotter
scenarios.
Weather
extremes in Europe in recent years have at times surprised climate scientists
with their strength and adaptation experts with their lethality as rising
temperatures have warped the climate.
Heavy
rains supercharged by climate breakdown killed 134 people in Germany’s Ahr
valley in 2021 and 229 people in the Valencia region of Spain in 2024. Across
the continent, summer heat kills many tens of thousands of people each year,
with studies attributing between half and two-thirds of the death toll to the
rise in temperatures caused by fossil fuel pollution. Last year’s wildfires,
meanwhile, torched more of Europe than scientists have ever recorded.
Last
week, Portugal was urged to draw up climate adaptation plans as the country was
hit by an unprecedented series of storms that killed at least 16 people and
caused an estimated €775m (£675m) of damage.
Van Aalst
said: “Twenty years ago, we’d have said those extremes are indeed going to be a
problem, but primarily in poorer countries that cannot cope. What we’re now
noticing is that Europe itself is vulnerable, especially for conditions it has
not faced in the past.
“It turns
out our preparedness is not so great. And we have real work to do to upgrade
our early warning systems.”
The
ESABCC report recommends that the EU mandate climate risk assessments, embed
climate resilience into all policies and channel more money – including from
private sources – into protective measures. It does not estimate the scale of
investments needed to keep Europe safe.
Van
Aalst, who was an author of the last Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(IPCC) report, said the most important message was to avoid a future in which
the world heats to such an extreme degree.
“The IPCC
is clear this is a very problematic future with rapidly rising risks,” he said.
“And for a number of risks, we’ll reach the limits of adaptation.”

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