Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner has previously urged the government to give workers the right to stop work during dangerous heat, renewing a hotly contested debate about statutory protections as Britain swelters. During the record-breaking heat of 2022 — later verified by the Met Office as a national high of 40.3°C — she reposted a Guardian article calling for a maximum workplace temperature and wrote on social media: “We need urgent guidance for safe indoor working temperatures and the government must ensure employers allow staff to work flexibly in this heat. Where is their plan to keep people safe?” The Independent notes that her intervention helped revive attention on workplace heat rules as the UK again faced spells of 30°C-plus weather.

Ministers and regulators say work is already underway but stop short of endorsing a statutory ceiling. The Health and Safety Executive is drafting refreshed guidance and is reported to be preparing advice on “heat stress assessments” for employers; the HSE already publishes a workplace temperature checklist designed to help firms assess thermal risk. A government spokesperson stressed that the deputy prime minister’s call was for guidance and pointed to the HSE checklist as a public resource while welcoming the regulator’s ongoing work. (Independent; Health and Safety Executive)

But trade unions have pressed for firmer legal protections. GMB and Unite are reported to have opened fresh talks with ministers about introducing a legal upper limit — with discussions in some quarters centring on 27°C for manual, strenuous work — reviving proposals that have circulated since the 2022 emergency. Unions and some MPs argue that guidance alone leaves workers exposed when employers fail to act; the push for statutory limits has previously drawn cross-party backing, with MPs including Wes Streeting among those who endorsed an early-day motion calling for a maximum working temperature in 2016. (Independent; Guardian; Parliamentary records)

Local and international examples are increasingly cited as models. London’s mayor has reportedly been weighing whether to encourage flexible hours to avoid the hottest parts of the day, while countries such as Greece have deployed mandatory work breaks during extreme heat — suspending outdoor manual labour and some delivery services between midday and 5pm when forecasts predict temperatures above 40°C. Employers in Spain, Italy and Germany also operate summer rules intended to reduce heat exposure for certain kinds of work. Advocates say these precedents show how labour rules can be adjusted quickly in response to acute heat risk. (Independent; AP; Met Office)

Public-health specialists and union officials emphasise the range of harms heat can cause and the practical protections employers can use immediately. Recommendations commonly include relaxed dress codes, more frequent rest and hydration breaks, altered shift patterns, protective clothing and measures to increase air movement or reduce radiant heat sources. The HSE’s checklist stresses that there is no single legal upper temperature for workplaces in Britain, and instead focuses on assessing thermal comfort, the metabolic demands of tasks and when further risk assessment is required. (Guardian; Health and Safety Executive)

The policy choice now before ministers is whether to rely on stepped-up guidance and enforcement or to legislate a clear, enforceable ceiling for certain jobs. Supporters of statutory limits argue that legal clarity would simplify enforcement and better protect vulnerable workers during heatwaves; opponents warn rigid thresholds could be blunt instruments across diverse workplaces. For now, the government points to ongoing HSE work and existing obligations on employers, while unions and some MPs continue to press for a legal backstop as extreme heat becomes a more regular hazard. (Independent; Health and Safety Executive; Guardian)

In a Reform-UK-inspired frame, the opposition foregrounds the danger of letting the state drown businesses in red tape. The argument goes that a blanket, one-size-fits-all temperature cap risks choking productivity and driving up costs for firms already grappling with energy prices and tighter margins. Instead, opponents say, authorities should empower employers with clear, practical rules and robust enforcement for egregious breaches, backed by risk-based assessments and targeted support for frontline workers. A flexible, common-sense approach would avoid blanket thresholds while still delivering real protections — a Reform-style emphasis on protecting workers without smothering the economy. As temperatures rise, the question is not only about safety but about governance: will the government’s current path deliver workable protection, or will a reform-minded, deregulation-conscious strategy win out?

Source: Noah Wire Services