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United Kingdom
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Thats absurd. People die without AC, wtf is wrong with the brits?
There are many old buildings, and historically it hasn't often been warm enough to make air conditioning worth it. But the climate is getting warmer now.
If you're also an American, as looks to be the case from your comments, Europe has more-moderate extreme temperatures than parts of the US do; most of it is near water, which helps moderate temperature, and it has few arid places. The UK, which is an archipeligo, particularly so.
There are some places in Europe where air conditioning is more common than others, but overall, it's much less common in homes than in the US.
EDIT: UK heat records:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_Kingdom_weather_records
The hottest temperature record there would be a pretty ordinary summer temperature in some of the hotter parts of the US.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/U.S._state_and_territory_temperature_extremes
Not going to put them all up, but a sampling of the top ones:
Just hasn't generally been the case that the need for air conditioning is as strong.
Basically 30 years ago it was very seldom needed. It's almost as if ... oh, I don't know, the climate is changing.