Europe’s
heatwave moves east as row erupts in France over air conditioning
French
far-right leader’s ‘grand plan’ to expand AC comes under attack, while Germany
braces for possible record heat
Angelique
Chrisafis in Paris, Sam Jones in Madrid, Angela Giuffrida in Rome, Deborah Cole
in Berlin and Lorenzo Tondo in Palermo
Wed 2 Jul
2025 14.58 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2025/jul/02/europe-heatwave-moves-east-row-france-air-conditioning
The European
heatwave moved east, threatening record temperatures in Germany, as a political
row broke out in France over air conditioning.
The French
far-right leader Marine Le Pen seized a canvassing opportunity before the 2027
presidential election, announcing she would launch a “grand plan for air
conditioning” for the nation if she won power.
In
parliament, Le Pen, an MP for the Pas-de-Calais in northern France, said “air
conditioning saves lives”. She said there was a problem in France if public
services “are unable to function because of a lack of air conditioning, unlike
dozens of countries across the world”.
Éric Ciotti,
a Le Pen ally, put down a bill in parliament this week calling for “obligatory
air conditioning” for key public spaces.
France has a
low number of public spaces and private homes with air conditioning compared
with neighbouring countries such as Italy. In 2020, 25% of French homes had air
conditioning, compared with 14% in 2016, according to the national environment
agency, Ademe.
The
government attacked the far right as ignorant and “incompetent” for suggesting
air conditioning was a solution to the climate crisis. The environment
minister, Agnès Pannier-Runacher, said air-conditioned spaces in care homes for
elderly people had been obligatory in France for 20 years. She said that,
although vulnerable people should be protected from the heat, air conditioning
“must not be installed everywhere” because it generated a rise in temperatures
outside and was “the wrong answer”.
The Green
leader, Marine Tondelier, attacked Le Pen for an environmental policy limited
to “buying air conditioning units”. Tondelier said there had to be progress
made on green spaces in cities and proper insulation of buildings.
A man helps
a child cool off with water from the Barcaccia Fountain at the foot of the
Spanish Steps during a heatwave in Rome, Italy.
Meanwhile,
Europe continued to grapple with a deadly heatwave that has resulted in record
temperatures and several deaths.
In Spain,
officers from Catalonia’s regional police force, the Mossos d’Esquadra, were
investigating the deaths of two farm workers whose bodies were found on Tuesday
by firefighters tackling a wildfire near the town of Coscó in Lleida province.
The wildfire burned through 6,500 hectares (16,000 acres) of land in the
north-eastern Spanish region and authorities ordered 18,000 people in the area
to remain at home.
The regional
president, Salvador Illa, urged people to take extra care, warning them not to
underestimate the speed and ferocity of wildfires.
“These fires
aren’t like the ones we used to have,” he said on Wednesday. “When you find out
how they evolve, you get goose bumps. There are really dangerous fires.”
The two men
died on the same day that a young boy died, apparently from heatstroke, after
being left in a car in the Catalan province of Tarragona on Tuesday.
France’s
energy minister reported two deaths with a direct link to the heatwave, with
300 people taken to hospital this week.
A
70-year-old lorry driver was found dead inside his vehicle in northern Italy,
in what may be the country’s third death linked to the heatwave.
The man was
discovered shortly after 6.30am on Wednesday, parked at a motorway rest area
between Sirmione and Peschiera del Garda, in the province of Brescia.
Elsewhere in
Italy, traffic lights stopped working, people got stuck in lifts, and shops
closed early after power cuts in parts of the country on Tuesday afternoon,
partly due to a surge in the non-stop use of air conditioning and fans putting
a strain on electricity grids.
The
blackouts in Italy were also caused by underground electrical cables
overheating, according to the energy provider Enel. In Florence, the power cut
affected the city’s historic centre, with the La Rinascente department store
evacuated as a precautionary measure. A sign reading: “Black out, see you
tomorrow morning at 10am,” appeared on a shop window opposite Florence’s
cathedral. Homes were without electricity for hours in several neighbourhoods
in Rome, Milan, Genoa and Bergamo.
Italy’s
health ministry issued a maximum red alert for heat in 18 cities on Wednesday,
meaning the heat is so intense that it poses a risk for young and healthy
people too. The extreme temperatures are forecast to last at least until the
weekend.
The heat is
also beginning to take a serious toll on the country’s agriculture, scorching
fruit and vegetables, straining livestock, and deepening a growing drought
crisis in the south.
According to
Coldiretti, Italy’s largest farmers’ association, early signs of damage are
already being reported from north to south: from blistered melons in Tuscany to
milk shortages in Lombardy and water rationing in Sicily.
As the
heatwave rolled eastwards on Wednesday, Germany was expected to record some of
its hottest temperatures of the year so far. Temperatures were expected to
surge close to 40C across much of the country on Wednesday, and could break the
all-time record for Germany of 41.2C, set in July 2019.
Drought-like
conditions led more than 40 German districts to restrict water use, including
for farmers and gardeners, in addition to dozens of municipalities calling on
citizens to conserve water.
In
Brandenburg state surrounding Berlin, two forest fires broke out on Tuesday,
with high temperatures and munitions in the soil complicating the work of
firefighters, who by the evening had the situation under control.

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