Nights would not cool down the way they normally do
In the final days of May, Spain found itself confronting a heat that belonged to a different season entirely — a reminder that the boundaries between spring and summer are growing less certain. Weather authority AEMET extended heat alerts across six regions as temperatures climbed far beyond seasonal norms, and meteorologists warned that even the nights would offer no refuge. This early-season episode invites a deeper question: not merely how hot it is today, but what kind of summers lie ahead.
- Spain's meteorological authority AEMET expanded heat warnings to six autonomous communities on May 22nd, an unusually broad alert for a date still technically in spring.
- Meteorologist Roberto Brasero warned of tropical nights — temperatures refusing to fall below 20°C — a phenomenon normally confined to the peak of August.
- Households across the country were urged to close curtains and blinds during daylight hours, a quiet but telling sign that this heat required active defense, not passive endurance.
- The elderly, outdoor workers, and those without cooling faced the sharpest risks, as the heat found those least equipped to escape it.
- The early arrival of this intensity raised urgent questions about what the full summer might bring, with climate observers noting the episode as a possible signal of shifting seasonal patterns.
On the morning of May 22nd, Spain awoke to temperatures that felt displaced in time — more July than late spring. AEMET, the national weather authority, had already expanded heat alerts to six autonomous communities, signaling that this was no fleeting warm spell but a sustained and serious episode arriving well ahead of schedule.
Meteorologist Roberto Brasero offered a stark forecast: the nights would not cool. Temperatures would remain above 20°C through the evening hours — what scientists call tropical nights, a phenomenon usually reserved for the height of summer. The air, he warned, would give no relief.
In response, Spanish households received practical guidance: close curtains and blinds during daylight to keep homes from overheating. The advice was simple, but its nationwide reach underscored that this was a coordinated public health concern, not a regional inconvenience.
What unsettled observers most was the timing. Spain knows summer heat, but heat arriving in May with this force raised uncomfortable questions about the months ahead. If spring was already pressing against the limits of what the season normally allows, the full summer could prove far more demanding than usual — and those least able to escape the warmth, the elderly, the outdoor workers, the poorly housed, would feel that weight most acutely.
On Friday, May 22nd, Spain woke to temperatures that felt more like July than late spring. Across the country, the mercury was climbing well above what the calendar suggested it should be, and the nation's meteorological authority—AEMET—was taking notice. By that morning, heat warnings had been extended to six autonomous communities, a significant expansion that signaled this was not a passing warm spell but something worth taking seriously.
The warnings came early in the season, which itself was notable. Spain typically braces for intense heat in summer, but this episode arrived with the spring flowers still blooming. Meteorologist Roberto Brasero, speaking to the concern rippling through the country, offered a stark forecast: the nights ahead would not cool down the way they normally do. Temperatures would remain stuck above 20 degrees Celsius through the evening hours—what meteorologists call tropical nights, a phenomenon usually reserved for August. The air would offer no relief.
In response to the expanding threat, Spanish households received guidance that underscored the seriousness of what was coming. Starting Thursday, people were being urged to close their curtains and blinds during daylight hours, a simple but telling measure meant to keep homes from becoming ovens. The advice was practical and widespread, suggesting this was not a localized concern but a national one requiring coordinated action.
What made this moment significant was its timing. Heat waves are part of Spain's summer reality, but arriving in May with this intensity suggested something about the broader climate patterns at work. The early onset raised questions about what the full summer might bring. If May was already pushing the boundaries of what the season typically allows, the months ahead could prove far more demanding than usual.
The vulnerable—the elderly, outdoor workers, those without adequate cooling—faced the greatest risk. Heat does not discriminate by income or health, but it does find those least able to escape it. The warnings and guidance were meant to help, but they also reflected an uncomfortable reality: Spain was entering a period where the weather itself had become something to actively manage and defend against, not simply endure.
Notable Quotes
Tropical nights will arrive, with temperatures not dropping below 20 degrees— Roberto Brasero, meteorologist
The Hearth Conversation Another angle on the story
Why does a heat warning in May matter more than one in August?
Because it breaks the contract people have with the seasons. In August, you expect heat. You've prepared. In May, your body hasn't acclimated, your home isn't set up for it, and psychologically you're still in spring mode. Plus, if May is already this hot, what does August look like?
The meteorologist mentioned tropical nights. What's the significance of that?
Tropical nights are when the temperature never drops below 20 degrees. Your body needs cool nights to recover from heat stress. If you can't cool down at night, the cumulative effect becomes dangerous. You're essentially in heat for 24 hours straight.
The guidance about closing curtains—is that just comfort, or is it health advice?
It's survival strategy. Keeping direct sun out of homes prevents indoor temperatures from becoming lethal. For elderly people or those without air conditioning, that difference can be the difference between managing and collapsing.
Does an early heat wave like this predict a worse summer?
Not always, but it's a signal. It suggests the atmospheric conditions that drive heat are already in place. If the pattern holds, yes, summer could be severe. But weather is chaotic. What matters now is that Spain is already on alert in May, which is unusual enough to warrant attention.
Who suffers most from this?
People without resources to cool themselves—the elderly living alone, outdoor workers, the homeless, people in poorly insulated housing. The warnings help, but they only work if you have the means to act on them.