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ENVIRONMENT

Flooding, wildfire and 50C cities: How climate crisis will impact each region of France

Floods, wildfires, conflicts over drinking water, failed harvests and a capital that is 'unliveable in summer' - these are the deeply depressing conclusions of a report into the expected effects of the climate crisis on France.

The Alesani dam at 20 percent capacity on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica in June 2024
The Alesani dam at 20 percent capacity on the French Mediterranean island of Corsica in June 2024. (Photo by PASCAL POCHARD-CASABIANCA / AFP)

Réseau Action Climat has compiled an exhaustive panorama of the consequences of climate change by 2050 in each of France’s regions in a new report, France facing climate change: all regions impacted.

Climate change is not uniform – it does not mean everywhere will simply get hotter.

From temperatures exceeding 45C to mega-forest fires in the south, to glaciers melting in the mountains, coastal areas getting battered by stronger seas, and more flooding in the north, the respected NGO’s report brings climate change close to everyone’s home by examining its impact on a region-by-region basis.

Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes (including Lyon and the Alps)

Between 1963 and 2022, average summer temperatures in the south-eastern Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes have risen 3.3C, and that trend is set to continue. By 2050, more than 5.5 million people living in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes – that’s 68 percent of the region’s population will endure more than 20 ‘abnormally hot days’ during the summer months, compared to 14 percent across the whole of France in 2024.

READ ALSO Climate crisis: Heat claims ‘175,000 lives a year’ in Europe

Glaciers in the Alps and Massif Central are expected to vanish. The Institute of Environmental Geosciences forecasts that the Grande-Motte glacier in Tignes (Savoie), emblem of “four-season” skiing in France, has lost two thirds of its volume since 1998 and will disappear entirely before 2090 – perhaps even by 2060.

Bourgogne-Franche-Comté (including Dijon, Besançon and Burgundy vineyards)

Drought will be the key issue in the region immediately to the north of the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes – meteorological droughts of more than 15 consecutive days without precipitation were recorded every other year between 1991 and 2019.

READ ALSO France to revise its Champagne-making area due to climate change

As the region makes up nearly 10 percent of France’s farmland (and a huge part of its wine-growing area) drought – which, the report warned, would be accompanied by more frequent and longer heatwaves – will have a serious impact on the local and national economy. 

Meanwhile, rising temperatures also increase the risk of crop frost. Flowering is occurring earlier and earlier, exposing future fruits to late frosts. The developing fruit is then slowed in its growth, or even destroyed, having a serious impact on wine production.

Brittany (including Rennes, Brest and Saint-Malo) 

Brittany boasts a third of the coastline of metropolitan France – which means, in turn, it enjoys fewer temperature extremes than most of the rest of the country and is rapidly becoming one of the cooler places to escape to in the summer.

But climate change means significant risks to coastal areas, starting with the rise in sea level.

In Brest, the sea level has risen by 20cm since around 1850, with around 13cm coming since 1970, the report said. And seas are rising faster than ever – forecasts predict a rise of 1m by the end of the century and 2m shortly after 2150 at current rates. That would wipe out the popular tourist destination of Saint-Malo.

READ ALSO MAPS: The parts of France set to be underwater as sea levels rise

Inland, drought quickly becomes the major issue. For geological reasons, the region relies on rivers and reservoirs for water, which are struggling to recharge in drier winters, as the Brittany climate increasingly tends towards the Mediterranean.

Centre-Val de Loire (including Tours, Orléans and the Loire Valley)

Wetter winters, and much drier summers are expected in the historic Centre-Val de Loire. That means, in turn, more periods of low water in the summer – which, because it will also be warmer – means hotter water, which will affect wildlife, while also affecting groundwater reserves for drinking and agriculture.

Experts also expect more forest fires, and an increase in what’s known as clay shrinkage-swelling – which, pretty much means exactly what it says. As clay dries out, it shrinks, and it expands when it gets wet: which can be bad news for buildings sitting on top of it, including many of the beautiful and historic Loire Valley châteaux.

READ ALSO IN PICTURES: French drought intensifies as River Loire dries up

Since 2006, insurance claims for properties damaged by the continued shrinking and expansion of the clay soils they’re built on have gone up by 145 percent in France.

Corsica

The mountainous island of Corsica in the Mediterranean faces it all; more storms off the sea in winter, bringing coastal erosion; higher temperatures, even at altitude (temperatures have jumped by 5.2C at 2000m since 1970); summer droughts; more extreme weather events including flooding; and finally wildfires and rising sea levels.

Grand Est (including Strasbourg, Reims and Nancy)

The report strongly suggests that the summer of 2022 – which had 33 abnormally hot days in the Grand Est region and is currently considered exceptional – will become the norm. In the Vosges mountains, meanwhile, the number of hot days could jump to 40 as soon as 2050.

Drought is also predicted – and longer, more pronounced periods of low water in summer, hitting all areas of the region’s economy and environment.  Grand Est is the 4th most wooded region in France, and the second largest producer of wood – deforestation cause by dieback and increasing forest fires is a serious risk, the report warned.

READ ALSO ‘Prepare for 3C rise’: Europe warned it must do more to deal with climate crisis

Hauts-de-France (including Calais, Lille and Amiens)

Due to its high population density, its socio-economic characteristics and its long coastal strip, the Hauts-de-France region is one of the most exposed to climatic hazards.

Flooding in both coastal and inland areas is a growing problem – it currently threatens .2 million inhabitants in six out of 10 towns and villages. Beyond the damage caused, flooding has repercussions on access to clean water and electricity, water quality, infrastructure and health.

Total rainfall is increasing in the region: for example, Boulogne-sur-Mer has seen an increase of 29.3mm per decade since the 1950s – but it arrives over a shorter period, with summers increasingly long and dry, meaning that rain is more likely in extreme episodes, risking soil saturation, while summer droughts lead to soil degradation.

Île-de-France (greater Paris region)

The report introduces its chapter on Île-de-France with the hopeful headline ‘Unliveable in summer?’. And the first line reads: “30 days of heatwave per year, temperature peaks of up to 50C, and all the consequences that this implies…”

Because it is a highly urbanised environment the Île-de-France region is particularly vulnerable to the consequences of climate change linked to heat. Temperatures have in fact already increased by 2C on average since the middle of the 20th century, and are expected to reach an additional +0.5 to +1C by 2050 without any reduction in greenhouse gas emissions.

READ ALSO Paris ranked European city with highest risk for heat-related death

Without climate change, studies show that the July 2019 heatwave – during which the record temperature of 42.6C was recorded in Paris – would have had only a 1 in 20,000 chance of occurring. In statistical terms, it can be said that this heatwave was virtually impossible without human influence.

City authorities certainly take the risk seriously and have already begun modelling how they will cope with a 50C day.

Normandy (including Rouen, Mont Saint Michel and Caen)

Rising sea levels and maritime flooding are the major concerns in north-western Normandy. Higher-than-normal tides, which currently happen three or four times per year, could occur more than 60 times a year as sea levels continue to rise in the Channel.

READ ALSO Rising sea levels threaten Normandy’s historic D-Day beaches

Meanwhile, agriculture in France’s largest farming region will be hit by rising temperatures and lower summer rainfall, with river flows falling by as much as 30 percent by 2100; and more coastal areas are facing increased salinisation of water, as lower river water levels combine with rising seas.

Some areas such as the Orne and Aure valleys and the west coast of Cotentin are already impacted by this phenomenon, which is expected to worsen with the rise in sea levels.

Nouvelle-Aquitaine (including Bordeaux, La Rochelle and Limoges)

The massive forest fires in Nouvelle-Aquitaine in 2022 were a warning from nature. Lower year-round rainfall, higher summer temperatures lead to droughts, which drastically increase the risk of wildfires.

READ ALSO Do heatwaves cause wildfires in France?

Water deficits were a problem across most of the region in 2018, 2019 and 2021. But 2022 saw temperatures soar past 30C on 70 summer days, during a months-long drought that started in Spring. Nearly 2,000 towns and villages in the south-east of the region struggled with drinking water supplies.

The report warned this could become the norm if greenhouse gas emissions continue on their current trajectory, leading to rising tensions over water for personal, agricultural and industrial use. Plans for giant underground water storage basins in the region have already provoked violent protests.

Occitanie (including Toulouse, Montpellier and the Pyrenees)

Occitanie is already the region of France most affected by the repercussions of climate change – three of the four départements most affected by floods, storms and drought disasters between 1989 and 2018 are Tarn-et-Garonne, Aude and Tarn. 

READ ALSO Explained: How dangerous are French heatwaves?

Meanwhile, longer and more intense droughts are forecast in the south-western region. For a wine-growing and large-scale cereal crop region, the consequences are set to be devastating. The viticulture sector is already experiencing reduced yields, changes in the characteristics of wine – alcohol content has increased from 11 percent to 14 percent since the 1980s – and crop losses due to extreme weather events. 

Furthermore, according to a WWF study, if global warming reaches +2C, natural snow cover would only be sufficient for three ski resorts in the entire Pyrenees massif.

Pays-de-la-Loire (including Nantes, Angers and Le Mans)

The environmental future of Pays-de-la-Loire in three words? Droughts and floods.

The 450km of Atlantic coastline in Pays-de-la-Loire is exposed to rising sea levels caused by the melting of glaciers and thermal expansion due to rising ocean temperatures. The rate is accelerating and estimated at 10 m in Saint-Nazaire between 1980 and 2019.

In the absence of climate policies, sea levels could rise by 76 cm compared to the end of the century. Damage linked to flooding by submersion is expected to more than double in Vendée and Loire-Atlantique by 2050.

READ ALSO Beaches, cities and skiing: How the climate crisis will change French tourism

Meanwhile, the risk of forest fires is going up, and could increase by 40 percent over most of the Loire region if greenhouse gas emissions continue to increase.

Provence-Alpes-Côte d’Azur (including Marseille, Avignon and the French Riviera)

The last seven years (2017-2023) are the hottest ever recorded in the region – with 2022 the warmest year on record – and this trend is likely to continue.

Temperatures in PACA are now rising faster than anywhere else in France, with the average set to increase a further +1.6C to +2.2C by 2050, with the scale of drought increasing. Rainfall has fallen 45 percent in the summer and 30 percent in the winter compared to 1960.

Following on from this, an increase in damaging spring and autumn thunderstorms, known as épisodes méditerranéens, when a large amount of rain is dumped in a small area in a very short period of time. Right now there are as many as six of these episodes a year, compared to two or three in the middle of the 20th century. 

READ ALSO Is the French Riviera better equipped to avoid more deadly floods?

The report warns these storms will become increasingly intense and will affect larger areas.

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PARIS

Paris ‘rat-catcher’ mayor invited to New York to share tips

A Paris local mayor known for waging an epic battle against the rats that proliferate in the city has been invited to New York to share his ideas on vermin control.

Paris 'rat-catcher' mayor invited to New York to share tips

The mayor of Paris’ 17th arrondissement, Geoffroy Boulard, has been invited to New York City for a very special occasion – the first ever ‘National Rat Summit’.

Boulard has made a name for himself in fighting against the proliferation of rats, as evidenced by an iconic photo that went viral showing the mayor sporting a pair of white gloves, holding several dead rats by the tail. 

Boulard also launched a website called signalunrat.paris – which allows residents to report ‘in real time’ rat sightings in the arrondissement, so the pests can be dealt with.

The mayor of north-western Paris has also discussed using different techniques, such as dry ice or more innovative traps, such as the ‘Strygoo’ devices.

Eight of these were put into use, and the arrondissement’s town hall announced plans in May to purchase more. Basically, they bait the rats with seeds, then the rats fall into a trap of 10 litres of water with 500ml of paraffin oil, which acts like an embalming fluid, allowing the rats to be frozen and killed instantly.

One experimental trap saw 300 rats killed within nine weeks. Boulard said this method “can inspire New York”.

“New York City was interested in the results we’ve. We’ve noted, since the website’s introduction, a 70 percent drop in reports,” Boulard told Le Parisien.

This is not Boulard’s first trip to New York – after his dead-rat photo went viral in 2018, Eric Adams, who was at the time Brooklyn Borough President and a fellow anti-rat crusader, invited him for a visit.

Since 2018, Adams has been elected mayor of New York City, and he has made it his mission to wage war against rats by hiring a ‘rat czar’, attempting to build a team of anti-rat activists, called the ‘Rat Pack’, and most recently, hosting the rat summit.

Boulard’s team was quick to specify that the elected official paid for the trip with his own private funds, before noting that he is also visiting to get ideas from anti-rat and waste management techniques in the US.

“Waste management is a serious issue, we need to educate people about sorting. Beyond the simple problem of rats, it is a question of addressing all the issues of sanitation, cleanliness and general management that arise in large cities,” Boulard told Le Parisien.

READ MORE: French city to use ‘contraceptive lofts’ in bid to halve pigeon population

Paris already has rules in place about not feeding pests – such as pigeons or rats. Doing so can lead to a find of up to €135, though Boulard noted that the finds are “much higher [in New York City] than in Pars”.

Boulard’s approach is a stark contrast to that of Paris’ mayor, Anne Hidalgo.

In 2023, Hidalgo and her team advocated for the creation of a special committee that would study a ‘cohabitation’ between the city’s residents: six million rats and two million humans.

The mayor of the 17th arrondissement – part of the right-wing Les Républicains party – has not been shy about attacking Hidalgo’s idea.

In one interview, he invited Hidalgo to “go for a walk around the Eiffel Tower”, calling the plan “absurd”.

Though you might say that the mayor’s more resigned approach could be a recognition that the vermin – which once carried the bubonic plague and later served as food for the city’s residents during the Prussians’ siege of Paris in 1870-71 – are probably here to stay.

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