Recent News

Copyright © 2025 Indus OBServer. All Right Reserved.

France braces for heatwave with canal swimming allowed in Paris

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut elit tellus, luctus nec ullamcorper mattis, pulvinar dapibus leo.

Share It:

Table of Content


Lifeguards watch beachgoers as they bathe at the Beach of Catalans on a sunny and warm summer day in Marseille as an early summer heatwave hits France, July 1 , 2025. REUTERS/Manon Cruz

France braced for another heat wave on Wednesday, with Paris allowing swimming in one of its canals so residents could cope with the heat.
It will be the second spell of hot temperatures this year, after an unusually scorching week in May smashed records in half of the country.

“A heatwave episode will gradually set in across the country this week,” said Christelle Robert, of national weather service Meteo-France.

Temperatures were set to reach 36C or 37C in some areas on Wednesday, then peak at 40C in some regions on Sunday as the country celebrates the summer solstice with its annual nationwide music festival, “La Fete de la Musique”.

In Paris, swimming would be allowed from Wednesday evening under lifeguard supervision in one part of the Canal Saint-Martin in the east of the city, mayor Emmanuel Gregoire said on Tuesday evening.

Youth plunged into the canal during the scorching week last month.

“Spending an enormous amount of energy, municipal police, and national police to stop young people from swimming when it was 40 degrees… struck us as slightly absurd,” Gregoire said, however reminding youth that jumping from the bridges was dangerous and remained forbidden.

Read: Vast areas of coral reef could resist climate change: study

Alexandra Cordebard, the mayor of the capital’s 10th district, said allowing swimming in the canal earlier than scheduled in July was “a new way of fighting climate change and adapting the city”.

Later in the summer, swimmers will also be able to cool off at designated points along the Seine River, after it reopened to swimmers last summer for the first time in a century.

Paris had poured more than a billion euros ($1.15 billion) into making the waters clean enough to use during the 2024 Olympics. Studies and scientific bodies agree that heatwaves in Europe are becoming more frequent as a consequence of climate change.

Meteo France says that of the 51 heatwaves recorded nationwide since 1947, 34 have occurred since 2000 and 26 since 2011. Global average temperatures are likely to continue at or near record levels this year and for the next four years afterwards, the United Nations has warned.



Source link

Tags :

Serverindusob@gmail.com

https://eng.indusobserver.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Grid News

Latest Post

Find Us on Youtube

Indus Observer is an independent digital news platform delivering the latest, authentic, and unbiased news from Pakistan and around the world. Our mission is to promote truth-based journalism by providing accurate information and timely analysis to our readers.

Latest News

Most Popular

Copyright © 2025 Indus OBServer themes. All Right Reserved.