Forget Air Conditioners: How Paris Is Keeping Its Cool During A Searing Heatwave Using The River Seine
Forget Air Conditioners: How Paris Is Keeping Its Cool During A Searing Heatwave Using The River Seine Written By, Last Updated: June 30, 2026, 22:29
Forget Air Conditioners: How Paris Is Keeping Its Cool During A Searing Heatwave Using The River Seine Written By, Last Updated: June 30, 2026, 22:29 IST The French capital is aggressively scaling up its district cooling network—already one of the largest centralised systems on earth The Parisian municipal government has authorised an extensive expansion project designed to triple the network’s total length by 2042. Representational image As extreme summer heatwaves increasingly paralyse European urban centres, municipal planners are desperately seeking alternatives to traditional air conditioning units, which cool interiors only to exhaust ambient heat back into vulnerable city streets. While most metropolitan areas continue to experience a surge in individual cooling installations, Paris is rapidly expanding a radical subterranean alternative. Originally conceptualised in the 1990s, as per The Guardian the French capital is aggressively scaling up its district cooling network—already one of the largest centralised systems on earth—by transforming the River Seine into an invisible, city-wide utility. Replacing Thousands of Individual AC Units The existing network, operated under a long-term concession by Fraîcheur de Paris (a joint venture backed by energy giant Engie and transport operator RATP), currently utilises a 120-kilometre labyrinth of deep underground piping.
This infrastructure pumps water chilled to just a few degrees Celsius directly into the basements of the capital’s most critical and iconic structures. Instead of relying on thousands of noisy, energy-intensive rooftop chillers, institutions like the Louvre Museum, the Grand Palais, the Assembly, and various luxury hotels abstract their cooling from this centralised loop via localised heat exchangers. By centralising production in subterranean stations—some buried up to 40 metres beneath the surface—the system achieves environmental efficiencies that standard air conditioning cannot match. The network operates with roughly 50 per cent greater energy efficiency than conventional decentralised units, reduces overall electricity consumption by 35 per cent, and slashes refrigerant gas emissions by 90 per cent. Furthermore, the system has run entirely on renewable electricity since 2013, providing an invaluable buffer against the urban heat island effect. A Multi-Year Strategy to Scale Across All Arrondissements The Parisian municipal government has authorised an extensive expansion project designed to triple the network’s total length by 2042. The multi-decade master plan will lay an additional 158 kilometres of insulated pipes, construct 20 new production plants, and establish 10 massive thermal storage facilities.
