As an intense, record-breaking heat wave spreads across Western Europe, French authorities have rolled out a sweeping set of emergency measures to mitigate risks, including activating wildfire monitoring for emergency services and military units, limiting public alcohol consumption, and scrapping multiple outdoor recreational events.
On Sunday, Météo-France, the country’s national weather service, placed roughly one-third of French territory under its highest-level red heat alert, with unseasonably high temperatures recorded across the entire nation. Some regions saw mercury climb to 40 degrees Celsius (104 degrees Fahrenheit) on Sunday, and forecasters warn even hotter conditions will settle over the country on Monday. Compounding the risk, air conditioning remains far less common in French residential and public buildings than in many other warm-climate nations, leaving many residents with limited options to cool down.
To protect crowds visiting popular tourist sites, iconic landmarks including the Eiffel Tower have installed misting cooling stations, one of dozens of adaptive measures rolled out by national and local leaders to cut heat-related health risks.
The crisis comes amid new warnings from the World Health Organization’s European regional office, which released a report earlier this month finding that more than 200,000 Europeans have died from heat-related causes over the past four years, with the vast majority of these fatalities entirely preventable. The WHO also warned that the entire 2024 summer season is projected to see consistent above-average temperatures, which can trigger dangerous health outcomes ranging from painful heat exhaustion to fatal heat stroke. To address this systemic risk, the WHO has urged all European governments and public institutions to roll out comprehensive national heat action plans, such as opening free public cooling centers, implementing mandatory midday work breaks, or adopting flexible shift schedules to keep workers out of the dangerous peak afternoon sun.
France’s annual Fête de la Musique, held every summer solstice, has emerged as a top priority for public safety officials. The nationwide celebration draws millions of attendees to thousands of free concerts held in public squares, club venues, and open-air spaces across the country, growing into a major tourist draw that brings international visitors to communities large and small. To reduce strain on emergency response teams, the French government has ordered event organizers to restrict alcohol sales, a rule designed to preserve capacity for first responders to focus care on the most vulnerable populations.
Public officials are particularly concerned about high-risk groups: unhoused people living on exposed urban streets, and elderly residents, both in nursing homes and those living alone in residential properties. France’s devastating 2003 heat wave, which killed an estimated 15,000 older people, remains a defining national reckoning with the lethal danger of unmanaged extreme heat.
In additions to public health measures, the government announced Saturday that it was boosting wildfire preparedness across at-risk regions and ordering enhanced monitoring of water supplies for the country’s extensive network of nuclear power reactors, which rely on consistent water access for safe operation.
While authorities have not ordered widespread school closures, they note that shutdowns will only be implemented as a last-resort measure. For ongoing end-of-year academic exams scheduled for afternoon hours, many have been moved to cooler morning slots or rescheduled entirely to reduce heat exposure for students.
Prime Minister Sebastien Lecornu convened an interagency crisis meeting Saturday to coordinate the government response, and has scheduled a second follow-up meeting for Sunday as peak heat arrives. Lecornu has also instructed cabinet ministers to develop long-term plans to improve France’s resilience to future heat waves, explicitly including expanded access to air conditioning where necessary, as the country adapts to more frequent extreme heat events driven by climate change.
