The mercury has not merely risen; it has breached the operational limits of a developed European nation. France is today effectively paralysed, with Météo-France issuing red heat alerts across a swathe of the country from the Paris basin down to the Rhône valley. Temperatures are predicted to hit 42°C in parts of the Gard and Vaucluse.
The French government has suspended rail services on high-risk lines, closed schools, and urged the vulnerable to register on a voluntary heatwave database. This is not a one-off. It is the new baseline of a biosphere in distress.
Britain, by contrast, is not paralysed. Our infrastructure, while groaning, is holding. This difference is not luck.
It is the result of decades of deliberate investment in heat-resilient transport, building codes that mandate ventilation standards, and a National Grid that has, so far, managed to keep the lights on and the fridges running. The contrast is stark. In France, the SNCF has cancelled TGV services on the LGV Sud-Est, the main high-speed artery to the Mediterranean.
The rails themselves risk buckling. Concrete sleepers expand. Overhead lines sag.
In Britain, Network Rail has deployed its ‘heat patrols’ on tracks near London, but major disruptions have been limited to speed restrictions on a few routes. The resilience is real. But it is not a reason for complacency.
The physical reality is that every degree of warming increases the probability of simultaneous heatwave failure across multiple national grids. This is a pathway to cascading infrastructure collapse. The technological solutions exist: renewable microgrids, phase-change materials in buildings, more robust rail fastenings.
The political will, however, remains the rate-limiting step. For now, the British public should understand that their relative safety is a function of past investment, not natural immunity. As the climate continues to warm, that resilience will erode unless we accelerate the energy transition.
The calm urgency of this moment demands nothing less.