Fortune | FORTUNE 前天 21:40
Death of 51-year-old Barcelona street sweeper from heatstroke stirs labor unrest in Southern Europe
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全球变暖导致极端高温事件频发,严重威胁着户外劳动者的健康与安全。从巴塞罗那的街头清洁工到罗马的导游,许多劳动者在炙热的阳光下工作,面临中暑甚至死亡的风险。欧洲工会和国际组织正呼吁加强劳动保护法规,包括提供透气工作服、增加饮水和休息时间,以及在高温时段暂停作业。尽管一些城市已出台新规,但执行情况仍有待观察。在严峻的气候挑战下,如何保障劳动者的权益,已成为亟待解决的社会问题。

🌡️ 气候变化加剧极端高温,对户外劳动者构成严重威胁。文章以巴塞罗那街头清洁工的死亡事件为例,揭示了高温天气对户外工作者健康和生命的直接影响,如中暑和工作条件“难以忍受”。

⚖️ 欧洲工会与政府呼吁加强劳动者保护。面对日益严峻的高温挑战,西班牙巴塞罗那等地已出台新规,要求企业提供透气工作服、帽子和防晒霜,并在高温时段增加工间休息和遮阳路线,甚至暂停作业,但这些措施的落实情况受到质疑。

🤝 国际组织推动全球协同应对。联合国国际劳工组织(ILO)强调“热应激是隐形杀手”,呼吁各国加强对劳动者的热保护措施,并指出欧洲和中亚地区是本世纪工人暴露于过高热量风险增长最快的地区。

🚶‍♂️ 劳动者在高温下采取的应对措施。文章还介绍了希腊的烧烤厨师和罗马的旅游导游如何在高温环境中工作,他们通过在阴凉处工作、频繁休息、补充大量水分以及调整工作节奏等方式来适应恶劣条件,但也面临工作环境的挑战,如缺乏遮阳和通风。

🏛️ 景点管理方对高温的应对不足。以罗马斗兽场和古罗马广场为例,文章指出这些景点缺乏足够的遮阳设施,导致游客和导游在正午时分面临中暑风险,虽然有建议调整开放时间以避开高温时段,但进展缓慢。

In homes and offices, air conditioning is sweet relief. But under the scorching sun, outdoor labor can be grueling, brutal, occasionally even deadly.

A street sweeper died in Barcelona during a heat wave last month and, according to a labor union, 12 other city cleaners have suffered heatstroke since. Some of Europe’s powerful unions are pushing for tougher regulations to protect the aging workforce from climate change on the world’s fastest-warming continent.

Cleaning the hot streets

Hundreds of street cleaners and concerned citizens marched through downtown Barcelona last week to protest the death of Montse Aguilar, a 51-year-old street cleaner who worked even as the city’s temperatures hit a June record.

Fellow street sweeper Antonia Rodríguez said at the protest that blistering summers have made her work “unbearable.”

“I have been doing this job for 23 years and each year the heat is worse,” said Rodríguez, 56. “Something has to be done.”

Extreme heat has fueled more than 1,000 excess deaths in Spain so far in June and July, according to the Carlos III Health Institute.

“Climate change is, above all, playing a role in extreme weather events like the heat waves we are experiencing, and is having a big impact in our country,” said Diana Gómez, who heads the institute’s daily mortality observatory.

Even before the march, Barcelona’s City Hall issued new rules requiring the four companies contracted to clean its streets to give workers uniforms made of breathable material, a hat and sun cream. When temperatures reach 34 C (93 F), street cleaners now must have hourly water breaks and routes that allow time in the shade. Cleaning work will be suspended when temperatures hit 40 C (104 F).

Protesters said none of the clothing changes have been put into effect and workers are punished for allegedly slacking in the heat. They said supervisors would sanction workers when they took breaks or slowed down.

Workers marched behind a banner reading “Extreme Heat Is Also Workplace Violence!” and demanded better summer clothing and more breaks during the sweltering summers. They complained that they have to buy their own water.

FCC Medio Ambiente, the company that employed the deceased worker, declined to comment on the protesters’ complaints. In a previous statement, it offered its condolences to Aguilar’s family and said that it trains its staff to work in hot weather.

Emergency measures and a Greek cook

In Greece, regulations for outdoor labor such as construction work and food delivery includes mandatory breaks. Employers are also advised — but not mandated — to adjust shifts to keep workers out of the midday sun.

Greece requires heat-safety inspections during hotter months but the country’s largest labor union, the GSEE, is calling for year-round monitoring.

European labor unions and the United Nations’ International Labor Organization are also pushing for a more coordinated international approach to handling the impact of rising temperatures on workers.

“Heat stress is an invisible killer,” the ILO said in a report last year on how heat hurts workers.

It called for countries to increase worker heat protections, saying Europe and Central Asia have experienced the largest spike in excessive worker heat exposure this century.

In Athens, grill cook Thomas Siamandas shaves meat from a spit in the threshold of the famed Bairaktaris Restaurant. He is out of the sun, but the 38 C (100.4 F) temperature recorded on July 16 was even tougher to endure while standing in front of souvlaki burners.

Grill cooks step into air-conditioned rooms when possible and always keep water within reach. Working with a fan pointed at his feet, the 32-year-old said staying cool means knowing when to take a break, before the heat overwhelms you.

“It’s tough, but we take precautions: We sit down when we can, take frequent breaks and stay hydrated. We drink plenty of water — really a lot,” said Siamandas, who has worked at the restaurant for eight years. “You have to find a way to adjust to the conditions.”

The blazing sun in Rome

Massimo De Filippis spends hours in the blazing sun each day sharing the history of vestal virgins, dueling gladiators and powerful emperors as tourists shuffle through Rome’s Colosseum and Forum.

“Honestly, it is tough. I am not going to lie,” the 45-year-old De Filippis said as he wiped sweat from his face. “Many times it is actually dangerous to go into the Roman Forum between noon and 3:30 p.m.”

At midday on July 22, he led his group down the Forum’s Via Sacra, the central road in ancient Rome. They paused at a fountain to rinse their faces and fill their bottles.

Dehydrated tourists often pass out here in the summer heat, said Francesca Duimich, who represents 300 Roman tour guides in Italy’s national federation, Federagit.

“The Forum is a pit; There is no shade, there is no wind,” Duimich said. “Being there at 1 p.m. or 2 p.m. in the summer heat means you will feel unwell.”

This year, guides have bombarded her with complaints about the heat. In recent weeks, Federagit requested that the state’s Colosseum Archaeological Park, which oversees the Forum, open an hour earlier so tours can get a jump-start before the heat becomes punishing. The request has been to no avail, so far.

The park’s press office said that administrators are working to move the opening up by 30 minutes and will soon schedule visits after sunset.

___

Wilson reported from Barcelona, Spain, Gatopoulos from Athens and Thomas from Rome.

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气候变化 劳动者权益 高温防护 职业健康 欧洲劳动保护
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