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Wristbands with sensors and early starts: How Spain keeps working when the heat hits – World


Employers must have a protocol to adapt working conditions if the state weather agency issues its two highest heat alerts.

The morning sun beats down on Antonio Reina as he tends to a public garden in Barcelona, but he works reassured that a simple wristband protects him in the summer heat.

The device contains a sensor that detects body temperature. If Reina gets dangerously hot at the risk of making a potentially deadly heatstroke likelier, a red light and a sound raise the alarm.

“It’s an extra layer of security. As it’s supposed to go off before you have symptoms, it lets you leave wherever your place of work is, drink water, and get under the shade,” Reina, 54, told AFP.

A picture taken on July 6, 2026 in Barcelona shows a gardener’s wristband containing a sensor that detects body temperature. — AFP

The wristbands exemplify how Spain, a country long familiar with high temperatures, is adapting the world of work as climate change makes extreme heat spells more intense, frequent and longer.

The issue has taken on greater urgency in Europe after last month’s exceptional heatwave sent temperature records tumbling, was linked to thousands of excess deaths and disrupted daily life for millions on a continent where air conditioning is not widespread.

Barcelona town hall has this year distributed 1,400 heat-monitoring wristbands among its staff who work outdoors.

A gardener works with a wristband containing a sensor that detects body temperature in Barcelona on July 6, 2026. — AFP

After Spain recorded heat-related deaths among such workers in recent years, their summer working hours have been brought forward and cut short.

They also follow a protocol that includes hydration breaks, wearing caps and a requirement not to work alone.


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