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Paris faces one of worst heatwaves in more than a century

  • Daily average temperature in the French capital will hit a maximum of 39 degrees on Sunday
  • Heatwaves in France have become more frequent and more intense in the past 30 years

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Children play in a fountain to cool off in Lyon, France. Photo: AFP
Bloomberg

Paris is facing one of its worst heatwaves in more than a century, with daily average temperatures hovering around 30 degrees Celsius (86 degrees Fahrenheit) over a seven-day period and hitting a maximum of 39 degrees on Sunday, according to forecaster Meteo-France.

The hot weather will last through the middle of next week, creating the worst heatwave conditions in the French capital since the 2003 scorcher that lasted 10 days, Meteo-France meteorologist Francois Jobard said in a tweet on Friday.

“Other than 2003, the capital therefore begins its most dreadfully hot week since 1873,” Jobard said.

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The Paris region’s prefect, the chief administrative official, on Thursday declared a heatwave alert, activating measures such as delivering fans to vulnerable people and handing out water bottles to the homeless.

Tourists visit the Louvre museum in Paris: Photo: AFP
Tourists visit the Louvre museum in Paris: Photo: AFP
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After the 2003 heatwave killed an estimated 15,000 people in France, the country introduced a “plan canicule” to limit the impact of episodes of hot weather.

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