July 1, 2025

21 thoughts on “The 2003 European Heat Wave – How It Became So Deadly | Disaster Documentary

  1. I remember in 2019 and it being 100- 113 degrees F for five days and being stuck in a trailer in a rural area with locked windows and no AC because they were broken. I spent some of that time with with family, but the heat wave kept dragging out and I came back home too early. My elderly dog acted like he was going to die and was put down soon after. I`m even disabled and was fighting cancer that year, but you can't expect help from anyone besides friends or family. The people in the cities were going to hotels, because they also had no AC.

  2. CA cities set up cooling centers and offer free rides to them and back home during hearwaves. France, Europe, and the UK have plenty of large stone buildings that would stay cool, but as far as I'm aware they still haven't set up anything similar. What changes, if any, were implemented to plan for the next heatwave?

  3. Where was I August of 2003? On vacation in Quebec, and then camping in Algonquin Provincial Park. I remember it being a bit warmer than usual, but in the north woods, that was welcomed, especially at night. I found out about the European deaths after the fact.

  4. While visiting Canada, I had to explain Celsius to my dad. He thought it was Fahrenheit. 20s in Fahrenheit is below freezing. 33 degrees in Fahrenheit is when water freezes. The forties is standard late fall early spring temperatures.

    As for this, worst heatwave here was 106 degrees Fahrenheit. We didn’t have air conditioning. I took our Yorkies and stayed overnight with my grandparents because they had AC, and both dogs were looking pretty uncomfortable. That was the summer of 2008.

    In temps like these, do check on your elders and your pets. Find AC. Your car should have AC. Use it.

    Open your freezer door and stay close by. Anything helps.

    Cold treats, baths, even wetting towels with cold water, ice packs. Anything cold will help.

  5. I'm in the US in New York in my 50s. This is the 3rd year in a hell apartment with roaches but no air conditioning and no air conditioning in my car. Stores and restaurants that used to be freezing stopped using air conditioning for years.

  6. I live in Arizona. Tucson
    This past week was horrid . 112 114 110. Every day . Even the nights were still in the 90s. But I came here 8 yrs ago untold of how bad the heat was. For me the first couple yrs weren't so bad . Now with this rise in temperature it's unbearable the only thing that saved me is I have air-conditioning. I feel sorry fir the homeless. I have distributed water to many of them. Just going outside to do this was hot hot hot. But I know they needed everyone's h e lp and sympathy.

  7. French people have a communist mentality so they expect everything from the state. This is why when temperatures increased to dangerous levels, nobody did anything thinking that the magic state and the civil servants with their magic powers would run to their rescue! 😂😂😂. Whenever there is a problem in France, the first thing people say is. “ mais que fait le gouvernement ? »

  8. It's good to see the governments in Europe respond. Good for France. (I wonder what Trump's high heat defense plan is. It's a joke.) The number of heat deaths in Europe is heartbreaking.

  9. Great work ! i really love your content i hope you have many more coming! If you are looking for a subject there's the Quebec bridge that fell twice. longer videos would be even better !

  10. We're going to get roasted and toasted this weekend on the eastern seaboard of the US 🥵. Alot of the major cities such as New York and Boston are expecting temperatures to be well into the 90s – 100s F. Stay hydrated my friends 🥤🧊🍶

  11. I have to say, the highest head index I have ever been in was when I worked as a cart pusher/bagger for Kroger in Alabama 2011. It was 117 and I was still expected to wear my dark blue polo tucked into my black dress pants. I started to get dizzy and sick to my stomach so I went and stood next to the deli coolers. They tried to be like “your carts are building up.” I immediately looked my supervisor in the eye and said “Absolutely not right now. I need more than 1 minute of relief from this heat and I am not doing it for 2 more hours without even a water break, unless yall want to help me, no.” I got to have my water breaks. 😅

  12. Hottest temps I've been in was the Summer I worked at a greenhouse. Improperly ventilated greenhouses, 3 of them, where the thermometer stopped at 130F. All 3 greenhouses were 130 on the thermometer and I would run in very quickly to turn on the hoses and run back out as fast as I could. The air so hot it hurt to breathe it.
    You would feel extremely light headed and faint after only 2 minutes, and you could feel your pulse in your face and head.
    I could get out of the greenhouses quickly. I couldn't imagine being trapped in a building or apartment at those temps with no way to get out.
    Horrible way to die. RIP to all those who perished.

Leave a Reply to @tarody3953 Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *