Major power outage in France as Europe wilts under record heat
· The Straits Times- Europe faces a widespread, record-breaking heatwave, with France's national temperature indicator reaching 29.8 deg C and affecting 90% of its population.
- The extreme heat caused power outages for 106,000 French households, strained infrastructure, and led to skyrocketing sales of fans and air conditioners.
- Widespread discomfort prompted facility closures and school adaptations across Europe, with experts directly linking the severe heat to climate change.
PARIS – Europe was braced on June 24 for another day of a sweltering heatwave that has smashed records, left tens of thousands of people without power and sent air conditioner sales zooming in a continent unused and ill-equipped to handle searing heat.
The extreme weather is being driven by atmospheric patterns that keep hot air trapped in place for days, with these factors worsened by global warming, experts say.
France’s national temperature indicator – an average of daytime and night-time temperatures across 30 stations – reached 29.8 deg C on June 23, the hottest since measurements began in 1947.
With four more French departments being put under the highest heat alert category on June 24, around 44 million people are affected, according to AFP calculations.
Added to the 31 departments currently on orange alert, more than 90 per cent of the French population is exposed to extreme heat, with temperatures of 39 deg C to 41 deg C expected on June 24 from Brittany to the Paris region, and in much of the south-west.
The heatwave caused the country’s first major power outage of the latest bout of extreme weather, after a heat-related incident with a transformer left around 68,000 households on June 24 without electricity in the north-western Finistere department, the authorities said.
While teams worked through the night to fix the issue, which took place late on June 23, power is not expected to be restored in full until the end of June 24 at the earliest.
Up to 106,000 clients of the French power network were left without power by late on June 23, as the scorching temperatures strained infrastructure built for the days before man-driven climate change made heatwaves longer, more frequent and more intense, according to scientists.
Sales of fans and air conditioners have skyrocketed in a country where most buildings are not designed to cope with extreme heat.
On June 22, hypermarket operator Carrefour had sold 30,000 units by 6.30pm – “a thousand times more than on a normal day”, chief executive officer Alexandre Bompard said.
Sales on Amazon nearly doubled in the week of June 15 to 21 compared with the same period in 2025, while the electronics outlet Fnac Darty reported double-digit growth.
Thierry, an electrician in south-west France, said he was overwhelmed by requests for “emergency” air-conditioning installations.
“In theory, you have to submit a request to the owners’ association general meeting” in residential complexes, “but people don’t want to wait”.
Across the Channel, engineer Yana Markevich complained to AFP about legal restrictions in Britain on installing air conditioning, which has been criticised by some green campaigners for its high energy consumption.
“We already live in a world where heatwaves are becoming more intense. I don’t think denying ordinary people access to proper cooling in their own homes is a serious climate policy,” said the London resident, who has started a petition to make it easier for some home owners to fit units.
‘We’re suffocating’
John Beeler, a 45-year-old American engineer, said he and his wife were baking in the French capital.
“Visiting Paris in this heat is awful,” he told AFP, wearing a fisherman’s hat and holding a small fan.
“We’re suffocating in the streets, we’re suffocating in the subway and we’re even suffocating in our rental,” he said, adding that they would be moving to an air-conditioned hotel room.
Italy’s health ministry declared a red heatwave alert in 16 cities on June 24, including Milan and Rome.
The heatwave is expected to extend into Eastern Europe in the coming days.
Poland’s weather service issued high-level heat warnings for the western part of the country from June 25 to June 27, forecasting temperatures could break the record of 40.2 deg C set in 1921.
Croatia’s popular Adriatic coast was also put under red alert for June 26 and June 27.
Hungary, already under a second-level heat alert, said it was raising that to the maximum level from June 27 to June 30 as temperatures continued to rise.
The current heatwave is “significantly exacerbated by human-induced climate change”, without which the current temperatures would have been 2 to 4 deg C cooler, according to a scientific study published recently.
But some relief could start to come from the west on June 24, when Spain’s national weather service said temperatures would drop in most of the country.
No quick relief
No quick temperature drop was in sight across much of the rest of Western Europe.
From June 24 until at least June 26, the central and southern Netherlands will be under a code orange for extreme heat.
Anyone living in Amsterdam with a city pass may swim for free in six city outdoor pools, while national rail company NS will run fewer trains on a number of routes starting on June 24.
In Britain, James Bowen, assistant general secretary at the National Association of Head Teachers, told AFP that “pretty much every school up and down Britain will be having to make some form of adaptation this week in the light of the extreme heat.
“I think it’s fair to say that the school estate in Britain is not well prepared for this level of heat,” he said.
After some of France’s most visited sites, such as the Louvre museum and the Eiffel Tower, decided to limit visiting hours, the management of one of Belgium’s best-known monuments, the space-age Atomium in Brussels, said it would close earlier to visitors from June 24 to June 26. AFP