Changing countries, changing climates: Achieving thermal comfort through adaptation in everyday activities

Whilst increasing mobility leads to people regularly experiencing new climatic conditions, understanding how people actually adapt to new regimes of heat in their everyday lives is currently under researched. It is often assumed that increased demand for air conditioning will be an automatic response to heat, but widespread international variation in the current use of cooling technologies suggests a more complex situation. As one means of exploring how thermal comfort is achieved under different climatic conditions, this paper reports on the findings of a pilot study exploring adaptive practices in relation to heat with people who have recently migrated to Spain. The paper explores how thermal comfort is accomplished through adaptation in everyday activities including cooling technologies, clothing and routines and rhythms. The paper emphasises the importance of attending to how new routines emerge in the context of relocation and highlights a need for further research to understand how changing climatic conditions may serve to reconfigure the production of comfort.

[1]  Tzu-Ping Lin,et al.  Thermal perceptions, general adaptation methods and occupant's idea about the trade-off between thermal comfort and energy saving in hot–humid regions , 2009 .

[2]  The potential impacts of climate variability and change on temperature-related morbidity and mortality in the United States. , 2001 .

[3]  Russell Hitchings Studying thermal comfort in context , 2009 .

[4]  T. Collier,et al.  The coastal environment and human health: microbial indicators, pathogens, sentinels and reservoirs , 2008, Environmental health : a global access science source.

[5]  C. Bouden,et al.  An adaptive thermal comfort model for the Tunisian context: a field study results , 2005 .

[6]  R. Cole,et al.  Re-contextualizing the notion of comfort , 2008 .

[7]  W. Adger,et al.  Are there social limits to adaptation to climate change? , 2009 .

[8]  E. Shove Converging Conventions of Comfort, Cleanliness and Convenience , 2003 .

[9]  S. Hajat,et al.  Heat-related and cold-related deaths in England and Wales: who is at risk? , 2006, Occupational and Environmental Medicine.

[10]  Shakoor Hajat,et al.  An ecological time-series study of heat-related mortality in three European cities , 2008, Environmental Health.

[11]  T. Stathopoulos,et al.  Outdoor human comfort in an urban climate , 2004 .

[12]  J. Palutikof,et al.  Public perceptions of unusually warm weather in the UK: impacts, responses and adaptations , 2004 .

[13]  R. Hitchings,et al.  Coping with the immediate experience of climate: regional variations and indoor trajectories , 2011 .

[14]  Gunnar S. Eskeland,et al.  Electricity demand in a changing climate , 2010 .

[15]  Madhavi Indraganti,et al.  Behavioural adaptation and the use of environmental controls in summer for thermal comfort in apartments in India , 2010 .

[16]  M. Nikolopoulou,et al.  Thermal comfort in outdoor urban spaces: Analysis across different European countries , 2006 .

[17]  P. Höppe Different aspects of assessing indoor and outdoor thermal comfort , 2002 .

[18]  Ken Parsons,et al.  Maintaining health, comfort and productivity in heat waves , 2009, Global health action.

[19]  M. Hulme Cosmopolitan Climates , 2010 .

[20]  Sam Brown,et al.  Understanding heat wave vulnerability in nursing and residential homes , 2008 .

[21]  J. Garssen,et al.  150 Years of temperature-related excess mortality in the Netherlands , 2009 .

[22]  E. R. Hitchin,et al.  Future environmental impacts of room air-conditioners in Europe , 2009 .

[23]  A Auliciems,et al.  Air conditioning in a tropical climate: Impacts upon European residents in Darwin, Australia , 1986, International journal of biometeorology.

[24]  Willett Kempton,et al.  «I always turn it on super» : user decisions about when and how to operate room air conditioners , 1992 .

[25]  R. Hitchings,et al.  Air Conditioning and the Material Culture of Routine Human Encasement , 2008 .

[26]  E. Shove,et al.  Debating the future of comfort: environmental sustainability, energy consumption and the indoor environment , 2005 .