PARIS ā The 2024 Olympics famously launched with a rain-soaked opening ceremony that drenched athletes and spectators alike. They're enduring the opposite experience Tuesday: a heat wave.
Most of France is under heat warnings, with temperatures in Paris hitting 36 degrees Celsius (97 Fahrenheit), the national weather agency said. Air conditioning is far less common in French homes, shops and restaurants than in places like the United States.
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The heat was even worse in the south, including the region around the Mediterranean cities of Marseille and Nice that are hosting Olympic competitions like soccer and sailing. It was as hot as 41 C (105 F) in parts of southern France.
Gymnastics superstar Simone Biles posted a video on Instagram struggling with the lack of air conditioning.
āDonāt come for me about my hair,ā Biles wrote on Instagram before the gymnastics team final. āIT WAS DONE but bus has NO AC and itās like 9,000 degrees. Oh & a 45 minutes ride.ā
Back-to-back record global heat was seen last week as climate change makes extreme weather more frequent and intense. Paris 2024 organizers have aimed to cut the event's carbon footprint, with measures like turning to an underfloor cooling system and insulation instead of air conditioning at the Olympic village where athletes are staying. Some countries, like the U.S., brought their own air conditioning units.
Visitors and athletes endured a sweaty and sunny Tuesday before thunderstorms were expected to sweep into the Paris area in the evening. People dipped into a Paris canal that's a popular swim spot or fanned themselves at exposed Olympic venues.
U.K. tourist Sarah David summed it up with her game plan: āEating lots of ice cream, lots of water, bought a new fan.ā
Volunteers used hoses to spray down cheering fans at the shadeless beach volleyball stadium near the Eiffel Tower and put up signs about water refilling areas. Spectators ducked under trees for shade, while players on the sunbaked sand ā which can be more than 20 C (30 F) hotter than the air temperature ā took extra breaks to drape bags of ice over their heads and shoulders.
āVery hot,ā Egyptian beach volleyball player Doaa Elghobashy remarked after competing in long sleeves, pants and a hijab. āBut not like Egypt.ā
People took refuge in misting fountains set up in parts of Paris and venues like La Concorde urban park, which hosts skateboarding and BMX freestyle cycling. The Paris area's train and metro operator said it was distributing more than 2.5 million containers of water at over 70 train stations and other stops on its network, as well as at bus stations.
The New Zealand womenās rugby sevens team was turning to slushies, ice blocks, shade, ice water and cold baths before competing.
āWeāve got everything we possibly can to make sure we were cool down before the game, and when you play sevens, itās hard,ā captain Sarah Hirini said.
The equestrian teams sprayed their horses with cool water and kept them in the shade after riding the course, which doesnāt take long. Riders also said they cut down the warmups from 45 minutes to half an hour ahead of competitions held in the regal gardens of the Palace of Versailles outside Paris.
āItās really hot, but you have to be professional about it,ā British rider Carl Hester said after an event Tuesday. āLots of walk breaks so the horses can relax. Weāve got a covered arena, so it keeps the sun off their backs.ā
At Roland Garros, where tennis players competed on outdoor courts, organizers activated the first step of an āextreme weatherā protocol, giving athletes in singles matches the chance to request a 10-minute break before third sets. The next step is to suspend play.
British tennis player Jack Draper complained that he wasnāt supplied with enough cold water on court.
āIām a big, big sweater,ā Draper said, his face still covered in perspiration about a half-hour after his three-set loss to Taylor Fritz of the U.S. āThe bottles donāt stay cool. We were drinking hot water out there.ā
Canadaās Leylah Fernandez, the 2021 U.S. Open runner-up, also complained of ācrazy heatā after getting eliminated by Germanyās Angelique Kerber.
āI trained in Spain and also in Miami, where it is hot ā this type of weather,ā she said. āBut sometimes when youāre in a match, itās a totally different environment. And in the heat, you get to feel all your emotions. ā¦ I didnāt manage it well.ā
French Prime Minister Gabriel Attal urged people to limit their outdoor activities during the day, hydrate, find shade and protect the most vulnerable ā the elderly and young children. He said Olympics organizers were following the āsevere heat waveā closely.
France's national weather agency described heat waves as āincreasingly intense, frequent, early and long-lastingā amid climate change. It said that before 1989, such high temperatures were observed on average once every five years, and since 2000, they repeat every year. It predicts the trend will keep increasing.
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AP journalists John Pye, Stephen Whyno, Sam Petrequin, Jenna Fryer, Howard Fendrich, Hanna Arhirova, Srdjan Nedeljkovic and Andrea Rosa in Paris; Jerome Pugmire in Versailles; Barbara Surk in Nice; and Giovanna DellāOrto in Marseilles contributed.