As thermometers across western Europe shatter records this week, the City’s attention has turned to a surprising outperformer: British infrastructure. While headlines scream of heatwaves from Madrid to Paris, the UK’s roads, rails, and power grids are holding up remarkably well compared to their southern neighbours. For a nation accustomed to mocking its own crumbling infrastructure, this is an unexpected dividend of climate change. But before we pop the champagne, let’s examine the numbers.
In France, the state-owned rail operator SNCF has been forced to slow TGV trains to prevent tracks buckling, causing delays across the network. Spain’s energy grid has struggled with surging demand for air conditioning, prompting warnings of blackouts. Meanwhile, London’s Tube continues to run, albeit with passengers sweltering in carriages. The M25 remains congested as ever, but at least the tarmac isn’t melting. Why the discrepancy?
The answer lies in the peculiar nature of British weather. Our infrastructure is designed for mild, wet conditions. Heatwaves are rare, so investment in cooling systems has been minimal. But paradoxically, the very lack of extreme heat means our assets are less stressed when temperatures spike. A railway line built to withstand 30°C average summer highs is less likely to buckle at 35°C than one built for 40°C norms. It’s a reminder that low expectations can yield pleasant surprises.
Yet the markets are not cheering. Gilt yields remain stubbornly elevated as investors price in the cost of adaptation. The Bank of England’s monetary policy committee will likely note that infrastructure resilience is a transitory factor. The real concern is inflation. Higher temperatures drive up food prices and energy demand, both of which feed into the CPI basket. The heatwave is amplifying the cost-of-living crisis, with no relief in sight.
Capital flight is a growing risk. As southern Europe bakes, institutional investors are re-evaluating the desirability of bonds from nations with chronic heat exposure. Italy’s debt is already under scrutiny. The UK, by contrast, looks like a relative safe haven. But that could change if the heatwave persists. Climate change is a slow-moving crisis; infrastructure resilience is only one part of the equation.
In the long run, the City demands action. The government must accelerate spending on heat-proofing transport and energy networks. That means higher borrowing, more gilt issuance, and a bigger burden on taxpayers. Fiscal responsibility be damned; the market will punish inaction more severely. For now, we can take a moment to appreciate that British infrastructure is not the worst in Europe. But that’s a low bar indeed.









