Realistically it needs to take account of the wet bulb temperature since the UK has quite a varied humidity and it also likely needs to account for exertion as well.
Why there’s no legal “too hot to work” temperature in the UK
Submitted 21 hours ago by Veserr@sh.itjust.works to unitedkingdom@feddit.uk
https://www.lboro.ac.uk/media-centre/press-releases/2026/may/too-hot-to-work-limit/
Comments
BrightCandle@lemmy.world 20 hours ago
Korhaka@sopuli.xyz 20 hours ago
Maximum outdoor temperature or working temperature? Worked in places far hotter than the outdoor temperature, eventually went home sick because it felt like I would have got heatstroke if I remained for longer. Cool shower and a lot of water when I got home and started feeling better after a few hours.
Frozentea725@feddit.uk 20 hours ago
It 45 deg in north india ATM, we should really get a grip
hellothere@sh.itjust.works 20 hours ago
Ikr, it’s like -22 at McMurdo station, people complaining about the weather are dumb bitches.
tal@lemmy.today 19 hours ago
Horse@lemmygrad.ml 19 hours ago
Zombie@feddit.uk 20 hours ago
This article doesn’t really explain why, just that it’s complicated.
That doesn’t prevent upper limits being put into place though, with scales based upon types of work, humidity, and break/water access.
For example:
But that bring us to the real reason for why, productivity may be affected and that would hurt the pockets of the wealthy.
yakko@feddit.uk 18 hours ago
Then make CEOs pay a weregild to the families of their slain workers, possibly equal to a small multiple of the maximum value of their productive labour for the rest of their working career, with additional considerations for pain and suffering. Anything less is a patently unbalanced equation.