As a dome of scorching air settles over western Europe, France has placed 45 departments under red heat alert, the highest level. Temperatures are forecast to exceed 40°C across much of the country, with parts of the southwest reaching 44°C. The heatwave, now in its third day, has already strained infrastructure and triggered unprecedented emergency measures.
In a sign of mounting desperation, several municipalities have banned the sale of alcohol in public spaces to reduce heat-related health risks. Alcohol dehydrates the body and impairs thermoregulation, a dangerous combination during extreme heat. Yet this measure, while medically sound, highlights a deeper unpreparedness: European nations are still reacting to climate extremes with ad hoc, uncoordinated responses rather than systemic adaptation.
The EU’s heatwave action plans vary widely between member states. France’s red alert triggers government-mandated cooling centres and public health campaigns, but neighbouring countries like Germany and Italy have no equivalent national framework. The alcohol ban, though localised, exposes a gap in proactive policy. We are still treating these events as anomalies rather than the new baseline.
The physical reality is unambiguous. Global average temperatures have risen 1.3°C above pre-industrial levels, and Europe is warming twice as fast as the global mean. The Mediterranean region is a climate change hotspot, with heatwaves becoming more frequent, intense, and longer-lasting. The current event is driven by a stationary high-pressure system, or heat dome, which traps heat and prevents convective cooling. Such patterns are increasingly linked to Arctic amplification and jet stream wobbles.
Meanwhile, energy systems are struggling. Nuclear plants along the Rhône River, including Tricastin and Saint-Alban, have reduced output due to water temperatures exceeding safety limits for cooling. France’s nuclear fleet, which supplies over 70 percent of its electricity, is vulnerable to both drought and extreme heat. This is not a future projection, it is happening now.
The irony is that Europe has the scientific and technical capacity to adapt. Building-scale solutions include reflective roofs, green corridors, and district cooling networks. National-level strategies should integrate heat action plans with energy and water management. But the political will lags behind the physics. We continue to debate the severity of climate change while thermometers shatter records.
The alcohol ban is a telling symbol. It is a small, reactive step that will save lives today but does nothing to address the systemic vulnerabilities laid bare by this heatwave. The EU must move from crisis response to climate resilience. Until then, expect more such alerts, more bans, and more tragic consequences of our collective inertia.