A red alert heatwave is gripping Paris, pushing temperatures to 42°C and transforming the city’s canals into makeshift refugee camps. Sources at the British embassy confirm they are monitoring the crisis, but questions remain about the government’s preparedness for the escalating humanitarian disaster.
The Seine and Canal Saint-Martin have become crowded with refugees fleeing extreme heat in southern Europe and north Africa. They sleep on towpaths and under bridges, lacking water, shade, and medical aid. One source inside the embassy, speaking on condition of anonymity, told me: ‘We are watching a catastrophe unfold. The heat is killing people. But our hands are tied by bureaucratic inertia.’
The French government has activated emergency cooling centres and deployed water trucks, but the numbers are overwhelming. The police have been ordered to clear the canals, but that only displaces the vulnerable. ‘They push us from one spot to the next,’ said a Sudanese refugee named Ahmed, his face burned by the sun. ‘There is no place for us.’
Meanwhile, the British embassy has issued a statement urging UK citizens to avoid non-essential travel and to register with the consulate. But that is thin gruel. The real story, as uncovered documents show, is that the embassy’s contingency plans for extreme weather were cut in last year’s budget review. A Foreign Office memo I obtained reveals that the ‘environmental resilience unit’ was deemed ‘non-critical’ and its funding redirected to ‘digital diplomacy’ initiatives.
This is not just a heatwave. It is a structural failure. The canals are a symbol of Paris’s gentrified beauty, but now they are open-air slums. The refugee crisis has converged with the climate crisis, and the authorities are playing catch-up. The red alert is supposed to trigger emergency measures, but in practice it has brought little more than a slightly increase in air-conditioned bus routes.
The embassy’s monitoring means little if it cannot act. ‘We are compiling reports,’ said my source. ‘But that’s not water. That’s not shelter.’ The heat is expected to peak tomorrow, with forecasts of 44°C. The canals will become ovens. The refugees will have nowhere to go.
This is a developing story. I will continue to follow the money and the bodies. The trail leads from the dried-up irrigation systems of the Sahel to the parched banks of the Seine. And it ends in a government that would rather cut ribbons than cut through red tape.








