-
Temperatures to drop bringing snow to some areas of France this week
Wet, overcast and blustery weather is forecast for most of the country
-
France’s Mister Menuiserie shops face financial issues: clients left in limbo
The door, window and joinery chain has gone into administration and cannot fulfil orders or reimburse customers
-
French farmer protests: what action is planned and where on November 18?
Major unions are demonstrating against the Mercosur trade deal in a bid to pressure the government to provide more support
Temperatures feeling as low as -16 hit France
Heavy snowfalls have hit northern France, halting school bus services, with bitterly cold weather affecting a band from Normandy to the Grand Est
No school buses were operating in Brittany on February 9, 2021 as the region braced for heavy snow. Large swathes of northern France are expected to shiver in sub-zero temperatures until the weekend.
The four departments that make up the most westerly region of France were among 21 on orange alert (see map below) for snow and ice in the forecaster's early bulletin. Up to 15cm of snow is expected in places, with 'feels-like' temperatures - where the wind chill factor makes you feel even colder than it actually is - hitting temperatures as low as -16 in places.
Strong, sustained winds of between 50kph and 70kph will cause the rapidly settling snow to drift.
Another 29 departments were on yellow alert for snow and ice (see map above), as a cold wave pushes south from northern Europe, affecting a band of France from Normandy in the west to the Grand Est.
Overnight temperatures are expected to dip as low as between -10C and -16C in some areas of northern France. There will be no respite until the end of the week, forecasters said, before warmer air pushes up from the south.
While the morning rush hour in Brittany was not affected, forecasters warned that conditions were expected to become more difficult as workers headed home. They urged people to limit their movements as much as possible amid concern that drifts could affect even major routes, notably in Finistère and Côtes-d'Armor.