Otago Daily Times

Lack of green cover exacerbati­ng heat in Paris

The heatwave in France has exposed a curious fact about the capital city. Manuel Ausloos reports for Reuters.

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AS a third heatwave baked France last week, the heat radiating off the asphalt outside the Garnier Opera house in Paris hit 56degC on urban planning expert Tangui Le Dantec’s thermomete­r. Shade was nonexisten­t with barely a tree in sight.

The Place de l’Opera is one of numerous socalled urban heat islands in the French capital, lacking the trees that cool cities down by providing shade and seen as a key line of defence against climate change and increasing­ly hot summers.

Just a minute’s walk away, in the shade along the treelined Boulevard des Italiens, Le Dantec’s thermomete­r gave a reading of 28degC.

‘‘Immediatel­y there’s a bit of a breeze. You can breathe,’’ Le Dantec, who founded Aux Arbres Citoyens, an action group opposed to tree felling.

Paris ranks poorly among global cities for its green cover. According to data from the World Cities Culture Forum, only 10% of Paris is made up of green space such as parks and gardens compared with London at 33% and Oslo at 68%.

Last month was the hottest July on record in France, the searing temperatur­es underlinin­g the need to strengthen the capital’s natural defences against global warming.

Paris City Hall wants to create ‘‘islands of freshness’’ and plans to plant 170,000 trees by 2026. It is also ripping up the concrete in dozens of school yards and laying down soil and vegetation.

‘‘It’s a massive tree and vegetation­planting project that is under way, much bigger than under previous administra­tions,’’ Jacques Baudrier, the city’s deputy mayor, tasked with the green energy transition in buildings, said.

However, City Hall’s green ambitions have provoked some protests. Le Dantec and other ecology campaigner­s say the local authoritie­s have been felling scores of decadesold trees to make way for garden spaces.

In redrawing the city’s landscape, the felling of mature trees runs counter to the authoritie­s’ own ambitions as saplings are more vulnerable to drought and less useful in fighting heat radiation, green activists say.

In April, green activist Thomas Brail shot video of more than 70 trees being felled on the city’s northern outskirts to make way for Mayor Anne Hidalgo’s vision for a ‘‘green belt’’ around the city.

Urban planners say Paris cannot be redesigned to better confront climate change without felling some trees.

But Brail said: ‘‘These trees had a role to play.’’

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Tourists queue in the sun to visit the Louvre Museum in Paris last month.
PHOTO: REUTERS Tourists queue in the sun to visit the Louvre Museum in Paris last month.

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