This article is more than 11 months old
Extreme
heat is our future – European cities must adapt
This
article is more than 11 months oldAlexander Hurst
Alexander
Hurst
Greenery,
shade and swimming spots won’t solve the climate crisis, but they’re becoming
ever more critical
Wed 9 Jul
2025 13.00 BST
Three
years ago, in Zurich for the first time, I crossed a bridge over the Limmat
River and saw people floating down it in rubber rings on their way home from
work, some casually holding beers. The Limmat is so clear that it almost begs
you not only to jump in, but to drink it.
Paris’s
Canal Saint-Martin has never produced either desire in me – but sweltering in
last week’s 38C heat, I wanted to close my eyes, pretend it was the Limmat, and
leap. Others weren’t so hesitant; there was a line of people going up one of
the footbridges over the canal waiting for their turn to jump, dive, backflip
or just belly-flop into the water.
As the
climate crisis throws its destructive effects ever more fully in our faces,
cities during heatwaves are their own type of ground zero. It’s no secret that
Paris lacks green space and tree cover, ranking at the bottom of MIT’s Green
View index. Last week especially, I found myself longing for the expansive
green lawns of Parc Montsouris – along with its free, public sparkling water
fountain (one of 17 across the city).
With the
sidewalks sizzling and the sweat dripping, how can we create more green spaces
and more tolerable streets in a densely populated city, with housing stock so
susceptible to increasingly intense summer heat?
The
answer seems to be to squeeze in bits of vegetation and traffic-calming
measures wherever possible. A green wall near Sentier Métro station; bushes,
trees, flowers and wildgrasses in former parking spots on Rue de Sully; the
pedestrianisation of Rue Charles Moureu in the 13th arrondissement, and
hundreds more streets like them to come. There is the “urban forest” growing in
front of Paris’s city hall, which is the capital’s third so far, after the 470
trees that replaced a torpid stretch of concrete and sun at Place de Catalogne,
and a repurposing of old railway tracks in the 20th arrondissement.
On
Sunday, the mayor of Paris, Anne Hidalgo, inaugurated her infamous pledge to
make the Seine swimmable again for the first time in a century. You might call
it a gimmick, though there are Parisians excited to take the plunge.
While
none of these localised urban tweaks are a substitute for big-picture political
action to tackle the climate crisis, we will need to use every adaptation
available to make our cities tolerable in the face of extreme heat. Whether it
is swimmable ponds or little pockets of shaded respite, these things all help.
Here in
Paris, for example, they are redoing an intersection near my apartment that is
also home to a small square. Previously, everything was paved in heat-absorbing
blacktop; now, the blacktop has been replaced with stone, which does a better
job reflecting the sun, and half of the formerly paved surface area has been
planted. The visual improvement is already incontrovertible, and in a few
years, when the plants have grown to their full size, what was once a heat
island will have been transformed into something far cooler and more convivial.
Hidalgo’s
strategy hasn’t been without its critics, but from the pedestrianised banks of
the Seine to the proliferation of bicycle lanes, who could deny that it has
been swift and high impact?
According
to Luc Berman at Le réseau vélo et marche, a collective working to improve
cycling and pedestrian infrastructure, the percentage of trips made on bicycle
in Paris has gone from 2% to 12% in the last 10 years, while car use declined
from 12% to 4%. “No other city in the world of this size has moved so quickly,”
says Berman. “It’s an example of what political courage can achieve at the
local level.”
In the
immediate aftermath of the Covid lockdowns, the city threw up concrete barriers
seemingly everywhere to carve out space for bicycles, and allowed restaurants
to spread out terraces into streets. Those temporary measures have now been
transformed into permanent cycling infrastructure and permanent demand for the
expanded restaurant terraces.
Will it
all be enough, though? My bedroom – off my building’s inner courtyard – is
fully protected from direct sunlight, but in last week’s searing temperatures,
sleeping was still a challenge. Marine Le Pen’s far right is attempting to turn
a demand for “obligatory” air-conditioning into its cause célèbre, while of
course opposing tackling the root cause of the heating, through the only forum
significant enough to do so: the EU. When it comes to overheating retirement
homes, schools, Métro trains and France’s nuclear-powered electricity grid,
other parties would be foolish to let the National Rally claim this ground –
these spaces do need air-conditioning. But in Paris’s 19th-century apartment
stock, it’s clear that it will not be coming to save us en masse.
This is
our future. For the moment, extreme heat is still just a week here, a week
there of sweaty, sleepless nights, but it will get worse. The Canadian
zoologist and climate activist David Suzuki recently declared that “it’s too
late” to solve the crisis. We can, and should, do as much as we can as fast as
we can to limit every 10th of a degree of additional heating, but we have
harmed our present and our future in an irreversible way and we’re already
feeling it. All that cities can do is adapt. Some will do a better job of it
than others. If that makes you go ugh, well – it’s the heat talking.

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