'Fresh' is a false friend for speakers of Latin languages. 'Fresh' in English means clean or new (as opposed to old, tired, dirty, used or stale). For example, 'fresh fruit and vegetables' have been recently picked, and 'fresh bread' has been recently baked. 'Fresh towels' in a hotel means clean ones that have just been laundered, as opposed to the old ones which are dirty/used. Having a shower makes you feel fresh. A fresh start means starting again. A fresh sheet of paper is a new, blank sheet that hasn't been written on. A fresh approach is an innovative one. Fresh air is clean air that isn't polluted, and so on.
'Fresh' can't refer to temperature. The temperatures are lower in Britain and the weather is cooler. Today it is 20 degrees in London and 36 degrees in Cadiz, so it is much cooler in Britain than in Spain.
Sometimes weather forecasters will say that it will feel 'fresher' tomorrow, but that's not the same as cooler. If you use the word 'fresh' in English with regard to weather, you're talking about air quality or wind speed, or a lack of 'heaviness' in the air.