As France enters another heatwave, it's barely recovered from the last one. Scorching temperatures return this week, and likely with them, the same question that was asked repeatedly in June: why won't France just turn on the air conditioning?
Some people are already taking things into their own hands. Dozens of people lined up outside several Lidl stores across the Paris region last Thursday, all hoping to get their hands on an air conditioning unit. In Aubervilliers, a Paris suburb, the doors gave way under the pressure of the crowd, and fights broke out among shoppers. “I saw people get trampled,” one shopper told Le Parisien newspaper. “I was in shock, I got shoved around in every direction, and unfortunately I didn’t leave with an AC unit,” another said.
Only around 24% of French households have air conditioning according to France’s energy transition agency – up from 18% just two years ago, but still far below the roughly 50% seen in neighboring Italy.
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📸 : Alice Sacco/Reuters
The UK’s accelerating support for renewable infrastructure is altering the fundamentals of sustainable construction and sustainable building design. Government approval of projects such as the One Earth Solar Farm reinforces a policy trajectory grounded in net zero Whole Life Carbon objectives and decarbonising the built environment. Extending the operating life of Sizewell B aligns with demands for consistent clean energy supply and underscores the interplay between energy resilience and the carbon footprint of construction. Simultaneous growth in offshore wind and tidal investments, marked by Marine Energy Wales’ £350 million initiative, strengthens the case for low carbon building systems and green infrastructure supporting industrial renewal.
The International Renewable Energy Agency’s projection of $480 billion savings from renewables by 2025 enhances the economic rationale for life cycle cost and lifecycle assessment calculations in both public and private development. This aligns with the growing adoption of Whole Life Carbon Assessment methods and life cycle thinking in construction as benchmarks for environmental sustainability in construction. The push toward resource efficiency in construction now extends to supply chains where access to low‑impact materials such as graphite determines progress toward net zero carbon buildings and carbon neutral construction.
On site and in design studios, embodied carbon and embodied carbon in materials are overtaking energy use as critical performance metrics. Manufacturers are integrating low embodied carbon materials, renewable building materials, and green building products within eco-design for buildings frameworks to improve building lifecycle performance. Certification platforms such as BREEAM and BREEAM v7 are formalising these shifts, making sustainable building practices measurable through environmental product declarations (EPDs) and verifiable circular economy in construction targets.
This convergence between low carbon design, eco-friendly construction, and end-of-life reuse in construction signals a mature market mindset where circular construction strategies, sustainable material specification, and low carbon construction materials define competitiveness. The integration of sustainable design, sustainable architecture, and sustainable urban development practices indicates that the Circular Economy is no longer aspirational. It is the operational foundation for reducing the environmental impact of construction, achieving real carbon footprint reduction, and securing the long-term resilience of the built environment.
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