This summer, cities across Europe, the Middle East, and Asia have felt something new: nights that no longer cool. Even after the sun sets, temperatures stay above 30°C, leaving people restless, sick, and vulnerable. Scientists say this isn’t just a freak season—it’s the beginning of a future where the line between day and night heat disappears.
So the question emerges: how do we live in a world where the planet itself refuses to rest?
Some argue that the only realistic option is adaptation. Global emissions goals have been missed too many times. Even if governments suddenly took drastic action, the atmosphere won’t heal overnight. That means we must invest in cooling systems, redesign cities to handle extreme heat, and even change how we work and live. In this view, adaptation isn’t surrender—it’s survival.
But others insist that without radical climate policies, adaptation is only buying time. Cooling technology and lifestyle changes may shield some people for a while, but if emissions keep climbing, no wall of air conditioners will save us. For this camp, the only way forward is urgent, systemic transformation: phasing out fossil fuels, scaling renewables, and holding nations accountable for real cuts.
So here’s the real tension: do we focus our energy on adapting to survive today, or on pushing governments toward radical policies that may save tomorrow?