Air
conditioning creates political divide as France records hottest day
BBC
Hugh
Schofield - Paris correspondent
Wed, June
24, 2026 at 3:52 PM GMT+2
https://www.aol.com/articles/air-conditioning-creates-political-divide-135245000.html
Only
about 25% of homes in France have an air-con unit
With
temperatures soaring, France is being forced to re-think its longstanding
reservations about one possible answer to climate change: air-con.
This week
debate about la clim' (climatisation) has once again burst out, with Marine Le
Pen on the populist right urging a mass subsidised roll-out and traditionally
hostile Greens conceding that some air-conditioning may now be inevitable.
Currently
the country has a low take-up, with only 25% of households equipped with an
air-con unit. In Spain and Italy the figure is 50%, and in the US and Japan
90%.
French
hospitals and schools are also only rarely equipped. Thousands of schools have
had to shut this week, and medical and nursing staff complain of conditions
fast becoming intolerable.
But with
temperatures nudging 40C - Tuesday was France's hottest day on record - there
has been a rush to buy portable air-conditioning appliances, just to let
children enjoy a few hours in class, or for suffocating apartment-dwellers to
make it through the night.
And more
and more, it seems, long-standing opponents of air-conditioning - mainly on the
environmentalist left - recognise that it is bound to be part of the country's
response to global warming.
This week
the head of the Ecologists party Marie Tondelier broke something of a taboo
when she said that air-conditioning would be needed in schools and hospitals.
"There
are places where we just can't do without it now," she said.
Her break
with what she called "anti-clim' dogma" is significant because until
now the Green movement in France has regarded air-conditioning as the worst of
solutions to climate change.
Far from
attacking the root causes of global-warming, activists said, recourse to la
clim' was merely attenuating the effects of global-warming.
And by
making those effects more bearable, it distracted from the essential fight
against the causes.
Not only
that, but air-conditioning is often criticised by environmentalists for
aggravating climate change.
This is
because it requires electricity to run - and though most of France's
electricity comes from nuclear power, elsewhere it means more fossil-fuels
being burned.
Far from
attacking the root causes of global-warming, activists said, recourse to la
clim' was merely attenuating the effects of global-warming.
And by
making those effects more bearable, it distracted from the essential fight
against the causes.
Not only
that, but air-conditioning is often criticised by environmentalists for
aggravating climate change.
This is
because it requires electricity to run - and though most of France's
electricity comes from nuclear power, elsewhere it means more fossil-fuels
being burned.
There is
also the question of the refrigerant gases used in air-conditioning, which are
greenhouse gases and often leak.
And there
is the urban heating effect, caused by the expulsion of hot air onto the
street.
Arguments
rage, but some studies suggest this can raise city temperatures by two or three
degrees.
Suspicion
of air-conditioning has also infiltrated government policy.
New
building and renovation norms focus quite naturally on insulation, greenery and
hi-tech methods for air-circulation - with the express aim of making
air-conditioning unnecessary.
Power
outages hit France as record heatwave set to peak
From
cool-down spots to chalk on windows - how Europe is coping with the heat
Six ways
to keep your home and yourself cool in hot weather
A giant
new hospital being built in the Brittany city of Nantes for example will have
air-conditioning in only half its rooms, provoking the wrath of medical trade
unions.
"In
the environmental context, we should have la clim' everywhere," said
Olivier Terrien of the CGT union.
According
to Valerie Pécresse, the conservative president of the Paris regional council,
"The state operates under an anti-clim' ideology. But air-conditioning has
got to be brought into the picture, along with other methods for creating
cool."
Pécresse,
who controls Paris regional transport, hopes to have all buses and trains
equipped with aircon by 2032, and she castigates her Socialist predecessor for
failing to see its importance.
The
political right has always been more pro-clim' than the left - and none more so
than the National Rally (RN) of Marine Le Pen.
This week
she has been calling for a nationwide "plan clim'" to equip all
schools and hospitals with air-conditioning.
According
to RN spokesman Jean-Philippe Tanguy, the plan would also include
government-backed interest-free loans worth €20bn ($22.7bn; £17.2bn) to allow
30 to 40 million householders to install cooling units.
Critics
denounced the RN plan as opportunistic and uncosted. They say the populist
right was the last to recognise the reality of climate change, so it has little
credibility today when it talks about its effects.
But the
truth is that with temperatures approaching danger levels in France, with lives
at stake and schools and hospitals at risk of breakdown - everyone is coming to
the same conclusion: that more clim' is inevitable.

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