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Death at Taylor Swift concert: How organizers deal with heat

November 22, 2023

After the death of a 23-year-old woman in Brazil, DW looks at how organizers of large events handle extreme heat and supply water.

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Fans outside the Taylor Swift concert
In the wake of the tragic incident, concert-goers are asking questionsImage: Pilar Olivares/REUTERS

The organizers of a concert by US pop superstar Taylor Swift in Rio de Janeiro on Friday are facing criticism after the death of a fan. A 23-year-old woman collapsed and died due to cardiac and respiratory arrest, according to investigations so far.

Almost as soon as the tragedy was announced, people began lashing out at the event organizers. Fans had not been allowed to take water into the stadium despite the blistering heat. It was also apparently hard to obtain drinking water once inside. These difficulties plus the exact cause of death are now subject to a full probe.

US singer-songwriter Taylor Swift performs onstage on the first night of her "Eras Tour" at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas
Even from the stage, Swift apparently noticed fans' discomfortImage: SUZANNE CORDEIRO/AFP/Getty Images

Even Swift herself noticed the lack of water. Video clips of the concert show her calling for fans to be given water and even launching a bottle of water towards the audience from the stage.

Is it right to point the finger at the organizers?

Asked about whether blame should be attributed to the organizers, two experts warned against jumping to hasty conclusions. The exact circumstances are difficult to determine from a distance, they told DW.

A lot also depends on Brazilian law. "Various parties can be responsible for security at major events," Olaf Jastrob, Chairman of the German Expert Council on Visitor Safety, explains. "It's not just the organisers, but also the stadium operators, the authorities and numerous subcontractors."

Taylor Swift fan cools off with a bottle of water
Temperatures reached over 40 degrees Celsius in Rio over the weekendImage: Silvia Izquierdo/AP Photo/picture alliance

Should more have been done to respond to the heat?

Nonetheless, it is crucial to offer visitors in enclosed spaces enough fluids, Jastrob said. South-east Brazil is currently experiencing a heat wave. Temperatures have reached more than 40 degrees Celsius and are at their highest for this year so far. In Rio de Janeiro, the mercury hit 42.5 on Saturday night. "The weather situation was therefore foreseeable," Jastrob stressed.

However, supplying 60,000 fans with water is no mean feat, according to Sven Hansens. "The necessary quantities are also frequently underestimated in Europe," the managing director of Event Safety Consult and deputy chairman of the German Event Safety Association said.

One must also bear in the mind the potential behavior of concert-goers. "If a young fan has struggled to get a ticket, queued for hours and somehow manages to get a spot right at the front, they might disregard their basic needs in order to hold on to that spot," Hansen said.

Is global warming changing event planning?

"We no longer organize open air events without meteorologists," Hansen said. This way, large event planners make certain decisions before but also during the event.

"Up until now, the biggest issue in this regard has been the risk of thunderstorms," says the expert. It is common practice for event organizers to insure themselves against financial losses in case an event must be cancelled.

But these days, other forms of extreme weather are relevant too. Organizers also consider the risk that excessively hot weather or strong UV radiation could end events early.

A metal music fan in a wheelchair is helped by three people through mud at a festival
Germany's well known Wacken metal festival was marred by mud this yearImage: Christian Charisius/dpa/picture alliance

"In summer, it's relatively normal for events with tens of thousands of visitors to have a three-digit number of first-aid situations. That includes everything from dehydration and heatstroke to insect bites and so on," he said.

At Taylor Swift's concert in Rio de Janeiro on Friday, the fire department registered more than 1,000 cases of fainting among the 60,000 attendees.

Swift's second concert in Rio had been planned for Saturday but the organizers shifted the show to Monday, when temperatures were expected to be (and indeed were) significantly lower. A court has also ordered that water containers be allowed at the singer's next three upcoming concerts in Sao Paulo and that a supply of drinking water must be ensured.

This article was originally published in German.

DW-Redakteur Jan D. Walter Kommentarbild App PROVISORISCH
Jan D. Walter Editor and reporter for national and international politics and member of DW's fact-checking team.