Heat Crisis Threatens Swiss Workforce Productivity
WHO and WMO report warns of extreme heat impact on Swiss workers, as Green Party calls for special measures including reduced work hours and rent adjustments during heatwaves.
WHO and WMO report warns of extreme heat impact on Swiss workers, as Green Party calls for special measures including reduced work hours and rent adjustments during heatwaves.

"Extreme heat is a public health crisis. It is already harming the health and livelihoods of billions of workers across the world."
"Exposure to heat might be one of the most serious occupational hazards in todayâs world of work."
Extreme heat is no longer a seasonal inconvenience; it is a full-blown public health crisis. The World Health Organization (WHO) and the World Meteorological Organization (WMO) have issued a blistering joint report confirming that the climate emergency is actively dismantling the safety of the global workforce. With 2024 confirmed as the warmest year on recordâsurging 1.45°C above pre-industrial levelsâthe data paints a terrifying picture of our new reality.
The summer of 2025 has only intensified this assault, with temperatures routinely shattering the 40°C barrier across Europe. Rßdiger Krech, WHO director of environment, climate change, and health, did not mince words in a recent briefing: "Extreme heat is a public health crisis. It is already harming the health and livelihoods of billions of workers across the world." This is not a future projection; it is happening now. As Switzerland grapples with these unprecedented shifts, the warning is clear: the era of ignoring thermal stress is over, and the cost of inaction is measured in human lives.
The economic engine of Switzerland faces a silent, invisible brake: heat stress. The latest guidance from the WHO and WMO reveals a staggering correlation between rising temperatures and falling output. Worker productivity crashes by a critical 2-3% for every single degree the wet-bulb globe temperature rises above 20°C. This metric, which accounts for humidity, wind, and solar radiation, proves that even moderate heat can devastate efficiency.
This is not merely about discomfort; it is a mathematical certainty that threatens billions in losses. When the body's core temperature fights to stay below 38°C, cognitive and physical functions decline rapidly. For a high-cost, high-efficiency economy like Switzerland, this productivity hemorrhage is unsustainable. While meteorologists forecast a temporary reprieve with cooler temperatures for the remainder of this summer, the long-term trend is undeniable. Industries cannot simply 'power through' physics; as the mercury climbs, the bottom line collapses.
Bern is feeling the heat, and the political temperature is rising just as fast as the climate. In a bold move to preempt future crises, the Green Party is demanding immediate government intervention to shield the population from the "heat trap." Their proposals are sweeping and controversial: they call for legally mandated reduced working hours during heatwaves and, strikingly, rent reductions for tenants living in poorly insulated, overheating apartments.
While the immediate forecast suggests a cooling trend for late August 2025, the Greens argue that reactive measures are insufficient for the volatile future. They are pushing for a systemic overhaul of how Switzerland handles extreme weather. This includes implementing 'cooling' measures that prioritize human health over rigid schedules. The debate is set to ignite parliament: can the Swiss economy adapt to a model where work hours fluctuate with the thermometer, or will traditional labor structures hold firm against the rising tide of climate change?
Behind the economic statistics lies a grim tally of human suffering. A staggering 2.4 billion workers globally are now exposed to excessive heat, a hazard that the International Labour Organization (ILO) calls "one of the most serious occupational hazards in todayâs world of work." The consequences are lethal. Every year, heat stress is responsible for over 22 million workplace injuries and a heartbreaking 19,000 fatalities.
Swiss workers in agriculture and construction are on the front lines of this battle. The health impacts are severe and often irreversible: chronic dehydration, acute kidney disease, and neurological dysfunction. Symptoms are frequently misdiagnosed or ignored until it is too late. Joaquim Pintado Nunes of the ILO emphasizes that this is a pervasive danger, not an anomaly. As Swiss summers increasingly resemble those of Southern Europe, the nation must confront the reality that for outdoor laborers, a sunny day is becoming a death trap.
The heat crisis is not an equal opportunity offender; it is a brutal amplifier of inequality. The WHO-WMO report highlights a stark divide: while wealthier professionals can retreat to air-conditioned offices, low-income workers and those in manual labor sectors are left exposed to the elements. The report warns that workplace heat stress jeopardizes poverty reduction efforts, hitting the poorest families the hardest.
In Switzerland, this raises uncomfortable questions about social equity. Tenants in older, unrenovated buildings suffer disproportionately, fueling the Green Party's call for rent adjustments. If the ability to escape the heat becomes a luxury good, the social fabric of the nation risks tearing. As we look toward 2026 and beyond, the challenge for Switzerland is not just meteorological, but moral. We must decide if we will allow the climate crisis to deepen the chasm between the protected few and the exposed many.