“It’s overheating”
First off, how do you know that? Is the gauge reading high? Or, is the coolant actually boiling? The most common cause of “overheating” is a gauge malfunction. Usually a failed instrument voltage regulator causing the gauge to read high. Use an IR thermometer and check and see what the actual engine temps are (hottest next to the thermostat) — IR thermometers give a relative reading depending on the properties of the material being read.
The next most common cause is the rad fan. Wiring, relays and switches can all cause issues. One odd one is that it is easy to wire the rad fan to run backwards. Instead of blowing air through the rad and into the wheel well, it draws air in. This works ok-ish at low speeds but, as you speed up, road speed related air pressure will block the fan from pulling air through and lead to overheating. The stock fan is also marginal at best at it s a pulled wired to run as a pusher. Given the curvature of the blades, this results in a 30% to 50% reduction in potential air flow.
The next Europa-specific potential fault is the flow baffle in the rad. Hot coolant from the engine flows in the bottom through the rad bottom, back through the rad top, and, hopefully cooler, out back to the engine. There is a baffle in the side tank between the inlet and outlet. There f this is missing or damaged, coolant will flow straight back out bypassing the core entirely. Remove the top hose and use a bent piece of wire to gently probe and see if the baffle is in place. You can also tell by feel. If the side tank is hot, top and bottom, but the core is cool, then the baffle isn’t there, bent or corroded. Should be hot at the bottom inlet, a little cooler bottom RH, cooler yet at the outlet (if the rad fan is running.
Lastly there are the usuals: corrosion induced restrictions, failing head gasket, faulty thermostat, etc.