France recorded its highest temperature in modern history on Tuesday, with mercury hitting 45.1°C in Nîmes. The record, verified by Météo-France, surpasses the previous 44.3°C set during the 2003 heatwave. While the statistic is alarming, the societal fracture it has exposed is equally troubling: air conditioning ownership in France has surged 40% since 2000, yet the devices remain concentrated in affluent households and commercial buildings. A study by the French Environment and Energy Management Agency found that 80% of AC units are owned by the top quintile of earners. This is not merely a comfort gap but a survival disparity. Heat-related mortality in low-income neighbourhoods is three times higher than in wealthier ones, a pattern repeated across Europe.
The peak demand strain on the French grid reached 95% of capacity, forcing Électricité de France to import power from Germany and the UK. The irony was not lost on engineers: fossil fuel power plants in Germany, fired to meet France's cooling needs, emit CO2 that exacerbates the warming. This feedback loop is a central concern for climate modellers.
Meanwhile, the UK's National Energy System Operator has announced an urgent review of its grid resilience framework. The catalyst was a near-miss on July 18, when a simultaneous surge in air conditioning and refrigeration load pushed demand to 48.2 GW, just 1.3 GW below emergency thresholds. Professor Sir David King, former Chief Scientific Adviser, stated that the UK grid was designed for winter heating peaks, not summer cooling peaks. The review will explore decentralised storage and demand-side response mechanisms, but critics argue it avoids the core issue: the need to phase out gas-fired peaker plants that currently fill gaps.
The data from both events feed into a broader narrative. The International Energy Agency reported that global space cooling energy demand has tripled since 1990, and without efficiency improvements, it is set to double again by 2050. Standard air conditioning units consume 1.5 kW per hour, refrigerants like R-410A have a global warming potential 2,088 times that of CO2. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology's Urban Climate Lab calculates that waste heat from ACs in dense cities can raise local ambient temperatures by up to 2°C, worsening the problem they solve.
Technological solutions exist: evaporative coolers for dry climates, geothermal heating and cooling systems, and passive building design. South Korea's 'Cool Roofs' programme has reduced peak electricity use by 6.2% in Seoul. Singapore mandates green roofs and vertical gardens in new developments. But these measures are piecemeal without systemic change.
The class dimension is not unique to France. In Phoenix, Arizona, the city with the highest AC penetration in the US, a 2019 study found that low-income households faced energy bills exceeding 10% of their income during summer months. The UK's review must consider equity, not just engineering. As climate breakdown intensifies, cooling will become a human right. The current trajectory ensures it remains a luxury.
Dr. Peter Carter, former IPCC expert reviewer, put it succinctly: 'Heatwaves are the great revealers. They expose the weaknesses in our infrastructure and the fractures in our society. We can build more grids or we can build a just transition.' The choice, as the temperature records fall, is becoming clearer.









