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Fréjus Tunnel that connects France and Italy to close this weekend
The tunnel will close for 12 hours and not the 56 hours originally announced
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TotalEnergies opens service station for electric vehicles in Paris
It is the first of its kind in the capital and has ultra-fast charging
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Conductors on French public transport will soon be able to check your address
Move is part of anti-fraud plans to prevent people from giving false information during fines including on SNCF trains
Flood alerts remain as French river levels rise
The Charente is expected to peak at about 6.2 metres sometime on Monday as rivers in seven departments continue to rise, experts warn
Seven departments of France remain on orange alerts for flooding, as experts warn that flood waters continue to rise along several French rivers.
Forecasters at Meteo-France lifted a warning in Landes early on Monday, February 8, but maintained the orange alert level - the second highest - for Charente, Charente-Maritime, Maine-et-Loire, Oise, Saône-et-Loire, Seine-et-Marne and Somme.
Il y avait un peu d’eau quand même... #crue #maine #belvedere #piverdiere pic.twitter.com/EA1aEKabzF
— Etienne Thierry-Aymé (@e_THA) February 7, 2021
'Significant floods [are spreading] very slowly in the Charente basin' warned floods watchdog Vigicrues in its latest bulletin, adding that high levels in the Somme, downstream areas of the Oise and the Saône in the Chalon sector, as well as downstream Marne were also cause for concern.
Crues : inondations à Esbly, en Seine-et-Marne ► https://t.co/swMRc5lQmV #inondations #Marne pic.twitter.com/7KiPhkhVkh
— France 3 Paris/Ile-de-France (@France3Paris) February 7, 2021
The Charente is expected to peak at about 6.2 metres sometime on Monday, forecasters said. Some 22 communes in the Charente-Maritime have been hit by flooding, including 14 in and around Saintes, where some 530 residents have already been evacuated.
Les arbres de l'abbaye aux Dames de #Saintes se mirent dans la rue voisine, un instantané de la #Crue @SO_LaRochelle pic.twitter.com/e5zArYU7EM
— Philippe Ménard (@PhilMenardSO) February 7, 2021
In total, 22 communes of Charente-Maritime are directly affected by the floods, including 14 in the sector of Saintes, the sub-prefecture of the department.
[INONDATIONS]
— Pompiers17 (@SDIS17) February 7, 2021
Le niveau de la Charente continue de monter. Les sapeurs-pompiers sont pleinement mobilisés sur les secteurs de @SaintesOfficiel, #SaintSavinien et #Pons, avec des renforts de nos collègues des #SDIS19, @SDIS23, @pompiers24 , @sdis86, @Sdis_87 et @uiisc1. pic.twitter.com/oo9doiXrVE
The record height for the river is 6.84m, reached in 1982. Then-President François Mitterrand visited Saintes by boat in 1994, when the river reached 6.67m.
Anyone hoping for a little respite from the weather will be disappointed as, after the heavy rain and flooding of recent days, freezing temperatures and snow are forecast for large parts of the country this week as winter returns with a bang.