Paris
Braces for a Future of Possibly Paralyzing Heat
City
planners say the day when temperatures as high as 122 degrees Fahrenheit, or 50
Celsius, could stall the French capital is not far off. They are already
starting to prepare.
Catherine
Porter
By
Catherine Porter
Reporting
from Paris
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/18/world/europe/france-heat-wave-paris-climate-change-planning.html
Aug. 18,
2025
Imagine
Paris at 122 degrees Fahrenheit, or 50 Celsius.
The
asphalt streets would melt in spots, making it virtually impossible for
ambulances and buses to pass. The lights and fans could cut out in
neighborhoods if underground cables burned or junction boxes shifted. Cellphone
service might go down as antennas on boiling rooftops stopped working. Trains
would halt as outdoor rails swelled, keeping nurses, firefighters and
electricity engineers from reaching their jobs when they were most needed.
Those are
situations city officials are already planning for.
“A heat
wave at 50 degrees is not a scenario of science fiction,” said Pénélope
Komitès, a deputy mayor who oversaw a crisis simulation two years ago based on
those presumptions. “It’s a possibility we need to prepare for.”
France
has recently experienced its second heat wave of the summer, with temperatures
reaching record highs last week in the southwest and heat alerts covering
three-quarters of the country. In Paris, this has become the new normal. Eight
of the 10 hottest summers recorded in the city since 1900 occurred since 2015.
In 2019,
temperatures in Paris hit a record, nearing 109 degrees. Scientists say it will
get worse, particularly since climate change is warming Europe at more than
twice the global average.
In 2022,
city officials asked climate scientists if Paris might experience heat waves
that reach 50 degrees in the near future.
Their
answer was yes, possibly, by the end of the century, or as soon as around 2050
if greenhouse gas emissions increase exponentially. But the scientists’
modeling showed that scenario was unlikely if global pledges from the Paris
climate accord were met and the rise in warming was kept below 2 degrees
Celsius.
“I don’t
think we should bet on that as a society,” said Alexandre Florentin, a green
city councilor and environmental engineer who spent more than a decade working
at Carbone 4, a leading French climate change mitigation and adaptation firm.
He led a
committee of city lawmakers, from all political parties, to examine the
capital’s vulnerabilities to extreme heat waves. They published their report,
Paris at 50°C, in 2023, separately from the crisis simulation.
They
found that there were temperature thresholds that could cause widespread
breakdowns, leading to a cascade of crippling domino effects.
During an
interview with a hospital director, for example, Mr. Florentin learned that the
medical center’s air-conditioning system was designed to work only when the
outside temperature was about 109 degrees or lower.
Any
higher and it would break down and the hospital would be forced to close its
operating rooms and send urgent cases to other hospitals. “What would happen if
they have the same problem?” Mr. Florentin said. “He didn’t have an answer.”
He added,
“As long as that threshold is passed, we face domino effects.”
Another
important finding was the vulnerability of schools, should a heat wave hit
during the school year — like in late June.
“The
classes will close, and that will have rippling consequences all through
society,” Mr. Florentin said. “If their parents work at a hospital or the
electricity facility, there will be bigger problems” — meaning understaffing at
crucial times.
His
strongest recommendation was for the city to invest more in green and shaded
yards and to transform schools into “passive” cooling centers with designs that
allow for more air circulation or geothermal cooling systems, not electricity.
Paris is
particularly ill-adapted to heat waves. A 2023 study published in the
London-based medical journal The Lancet deemed it the European capital whose residents were most exposed to
heat-related deaths.
The city
has the highest population density in Europe, and those people are packed into
buildings without insulation and with zinc roofs built for the city’s
historically moderate winters and summers, explained Franck Lirzin, author of
the 2022 book “Paris in the Face of Climate Change.”
Many of
its main squares are paved in stone and ringed with asphalt roads, transforming
them into radiators that help increase the city’s temperatures by as much as 10
degrees Celsius compared with the countryside nearby.
As part
of its climate change adaptation plans, the city is replacing some parking
spaces with trees and creating more green-friendly areas.
Just
under 15,000 people died from heat-related causes in 2003 during a heat wave
that hit France that August. Many were older adults living in apartments that
had zinc roofs with no insulation or air-conditioning, according to reports by
national lawmakers and the national public health agency.
In
response, the country drafted its first national heat wave plan and introduced
a system of registering isolated older or disabled people, so that they could
be checked on during heat waves.
Given the
surprising speed of climate change, the lessons of 2003 already seem outdated.
“The climatologists tell us the 2003 heat wave will be considered a cool summer
soon,” Mr. Florentin said. “We must prepare for much worse.”
The
city’s emergency simulation presumed a two-week heat wave, with temperatures
surging to near 115 degrees and forecasts for 122.
City
workers focused on two Parisian neighborhoods, shuttling elementary- and
middle-school children to climate shelters set up in an abandoned train tunnel
and an underground parking lot.
That
drill was followed by a tabletop exercise to see how firefighters, police
officers, hospital staff members, the Red Cross and others would interact and
respond.
The big
lesson from the exercise was that “Parisians are not ready,” Ms. Komitès said.
Some are
trying to change that.
A
nonprofit group focused on sustainable food has organized “Eating at 50
degrees” events around France, with chefs working on menus sourced locally that
require no ovens or stovetops, which exacerbate the heat.
Another
group, Health in 2050, has been bringing doctors, pharmacists and medical
scientists together to discuss how they can prepare for the health crises and
new diseases a hotter climate will bring to France.
The Odéon
— Théâtre de l’Europe is organizing an event in September in Paris to discuss
how theaters and museums can adapt for climate crises.
In May,
Prime Minister François Bayrou passed a decree requiring all workplaces to
create an extreme heat plan.
The city
government has doubled down on its own adaptation plans — pulling up asphalt
parking places and the center of roads to plant trees — 15,000 last winter
alone, said Dan Lert, deputy mayor in charge of the city’s ecological
transition and its climate plan.
“Our
first line of defense is massively plant,” Mr. Lert said in an interview. “The
best natural air-conditioners in Paris are trees.”
Where the
city cannot plant trees, officials are putting up more shade structures and
water misters to offer solace during hot days. They opened three bathing sites
in the Seine river this summer, so people have places to safely cool down
during heat waves.
Another
key part of the defense plan is insulating the city’s buildings, so they can
better resist heat waves. Since 2023, the number of private housing units being
fitted with insulation increased to 7,000 annually from 1,500 annually, with an
aim to reach 40,000 by 2030, Mr. Lert said.
But the
challenge is daunting. There are one million private apartments in Paris, few
with insulation, he said.
“It’s a
race against time,” Mr. Florentin said. “There is going to be a lot of change.
The question is what percentage of change we want and prepare for, and what
percentage we just suffer through.”
Catherine
Porter is an international reporter for The Times, covering France. She is
based in Paris.



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