Paris has shuttered hundreds of schools as a sprawling heatwave forces France to activate its highest red alert system for the first time since the 2003 catastrophe. Meanwhile, Britain’s relatively moderate temperatures and accelerated infrastructure upgrades have drawn cautious praise from climate observers, though experts warn that no nation is immune to the accelerating crisis.
France’s national weather service, Météo-France, extended red alerts to four departments on Tuesday, with temperatures in the Rhône valley expected to exceed 42°C. The French education ministry confirmed the closure of more than 400 schools in affected zones, affecting roughly 200,000 students. “This is not a drill,” said French Prime Minister Élisabeth Borne. “We are facing a climate emergency that demands immediate action to protect our children and vulnerable populations.”
The red alert, a tier reserved for exceptional heatwaves, was last deployed during the 2003 event that claimed over 15,000 lives across Europe. Current forecasts show no significant relief until the weekend, with nighttime temperatures in cities like Lyon and Marseille staying above 25°C, offering little reprieve.
Across the Channel, Britain has so far avoided the worst, with temperatures peaking around 32°C in southeast England. But the respite is relative. The UK Health Security Agency issued level three heat alerts for much of southern and central England, urging care for the elderly and those with respiratory conditions.
Climate resilience experts have pointed to Britain’s recent investments in heat action plans as a model. The country launched a national overheating strategy in 2022, funded by the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero, which includes retrofitting public buildings with passive cooling systems, establishing cool refuge centres, and mandating that new homes meet shading and ventilation standards from 2025. “The UK is still a long way from perfect, but they have taken the data seriously and translated it into policy,” said Dr. Helena Vance of University College London’s Institute for Risk and Disaster Reduction. “France, by contrast, has been slower to adjust its infrastructure for a world that is already 1.2°C warmer than preindustrial levels.”
Yet the crisis is not confined to Western Europe. Spain recorded its hottest June day ever in Cordoba at 44.2°C. Italy activated its own red alerts for 16 cities, including Rome and Florence, anticipating 48-hour peak loads on the power grid. The European Space Agency’s Sentinel-3 satellite recorded surface temperatures above 50°C in parts of the Italian Po Valley.
The underlying physics is stark. The atmosphere holds roughly 7% more moisture per degree of warming, feeding stronger and more persistent heat domes. Jet stream disruptions, linked to Arctic amplification, have locked the European heatwave in place for over a week. These are not anomalies, they are the new baseline under a climate that has not existed for 125,000 years.
“We are sleepwalking into the predictable,” Vance said. “Every degree matters. Every delay in cutting emissions deepens the risk. The schools in France did not close because of bad luck. They closed because of physics.”
As the heatwave drifts northwards toward Scandinavia, governments are scrambling to reinforce healthcare systems. In the Netherlands, hospitals have activated emergency overflow protocols as heatstroke cases triple. The World Meteorological Organization projects that by 2050, half of Europe’s population will face an annual heatwave of this intensity.
For Britain, the current episode serves as a reminder that its relative safety is temporary. Without continued investment in green energy, heat-resilient housing, and retrofitted hospitals, the heat will come. It always comes. The question is whether governments will listen to the data or wait until every school in every country is shuttered under red skies.