France's political establishment is fracturing over air conditioning as a historic heatwave that killed around 1,000 people exposes a widening gap between the country's climate ideals and the lived reality of millions sweltering in uninsulated apartments.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen has seized on the crisis, proposing €20 billion in interest-free loans to equip 30 million to 40 million households with cooling systems. Her National Rally party frames the plan as a matter of public health and class justice, pointing out that the French elites who lecture about "energy sobriety" rarely go without AC in their offices and television studios.
"The people who get told to endure are rarely the ones with cool offices and cool cars," Le Pen said, according to the Wall Street Journal. Her proposal has gained traction as temperatures in Paris exceeded 96 degrees Fahrenheit for 10 consecutive days, topping out at 105 degrees, and France's public health agency reported around 1,000 excess deaths since last Wednesday, with 85% among people aged 65 and older.
The French left has pushed back. Jean-Luc Mélenchon, the country's most prominent left-wing leader, warned that cooling would mean "increasing the damage" and said he would not expose his grandchildren to AC because it "destroys your sinuses." The government's official position treats individual air conditioning as a "maladaptation" to climate change — a wasteful technology that worsens the very crisis it addresses. France's road map for climate adaptation presents AC as harmful, rooted in energy-conservation policies dating to the 1970s oil shocks.
The numbers tell a more complicated story. Only about 22% of French households own an air conditioner, according to an Ipsos survey, even though 84% consider it effective against heat. Across Europe, the figure stands at roughly 20%, compared with 90% in the United States. France's electricity grid is uniquely positioned to handle the load — about two-thirds of its power comes from nuclear plants, and much of the rest is low-carbon, meaning running AC in France produces minimal emissions. Globally, air conditioning accounts for about 3% of emissions today, according to the International Energy Agency.
The 2003 heatwave, which killed nearly 15,000 people in France and an estimated 80,000 across Europe, prompted early warning systems and public awareness campaigns. But building-level adaptation has lagged. More than 40% of French homes still lack solar protection on windows, according to the Foundation for Housing of the Disadvantaged. Landlords face no legal requirement to install shutters or ceiling fans, and co-op boards and historic-preservation reviews routinely block AC installation. A national law to simplify shutter installation was proposed last year but has made little progress.
The regulatory hurdles have pushed residents toward inefficient solutions. Mobile air conditioners — generally shoddy units sold on the eve of heatwaves — have proliferated, along with illegal mini-split installations on roofs and balconies. Some Parisians have resorted to water-powered cooling systems that can use nearly a bathtub's worth of cold water per hour. All of these solutions are unevenly distributed, concentrating the effects of unadulterated heat on the poor.
The political stakes are rising. Le Pen's National Rally has often mocked climate adaptation efforts and fought measures to reduce emissions, but her AC proposal taps into genuine public frustration. President Emmanuel Macron's government has responded by slashing taxes on heat pumps from 30% to 5% and allocating €100 million for urgent AC installation in hospitals. Even Marine Tondelier, leader of the Green Party, acknowledged on BFM TV that AC, which was "not necessary a few years ago, is becoming so."
The debate extends beyond France. Germany recorded an all-time high of 41.5 degrees Celsius (106.7 degrees Fahrenheit) in Saxony-Anhalt. Denmark set a new national record of 37 degrees Celsius. The Czech Republic hit 40.9 degrees Celsius. Across Europe, more than 61,000 people died in record heat in 2022, according to estimates. The European Union's Copernicus Climate Change Service says Europe is the fastest-warming continent, with temperatures rising at twice the global average rate since the 1980s.
The question now is whether France can reconcile its climate goals with the immediate need to keep people alive during heatwaves. The last time the country faced a similar reckoning — after the 2003 disaster — it invested in early warning systems but not in building retrofits. Two decades later, with temperatures pushing past 40 degrees Celsius and the far right offering a simple solution, the cost of that delay is becoming clear in both human and political terms.
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