
French tv changes weather forecast to include climate change context
- Select a language for the TTS:
- UK English Female
- UK English Male
- US English Female
- US English Male
- Australian Female
- Australian Male
- Language selected: (auto detect) - EN
Play all audios:

THE NEW SEGMENT COMES AS PART OF FRANCE TÉLÉVISIONS’ EFFORTS TO RAISE AWARENESS OF CLIMATE CHANGE Two French television channels have changed their daily weather bulletins to include context
on the impacts of climate change. France 2 and France 3 made the change on Monday (March 13), calling the segment ‘a weather and climate update’ (journal de la météo et du climat). The aim
is to better explain the consequences of climate change on the weather, said France Télévisions. > 🥁📺☀️ Tout à l'heure, @anais_baydemir présentait la > météo de #Telematin à
l'occasion du lancement du > #JournalMeteoClimat ce soir à 20h40 sur @France2tv et 21h sur > @France3tv. Reportages, analyses, graphiques... Vous pourrez même > intervenir avec
➡️ #OnVousRepond ! @Francetele > pic.twitter.com/19XLfZRNQu > — Telematin (@telematin) March 13, 2023 Alexandre Kara, director of the group, told AFP: “It’s about explaining the
weather differently; not just saying: ‘It will be fine tomorrow or it will rain’, but also to explain why.” The programme will now also include “figures and data, we could cover temperature
anomalies, the dry water table, or explain winter drought.” The presenters will also respond to questions from viewers, and internet users under the hashtag #OnVousRépond (We reply to you).
These updates will initially be included in evening forecast segments. They will add around 90 seconds to the France 2 programme, and two minutes to the one on France 3. They will eventually
be included in daytime forecasts too. “We can’t keep doing the forecast as it’s always been done,” added Mr Kara. “It’s unacceptable to be happy about the fact that it’s 25 degrees in
Biarritz in February, without explaining why.” > 🌎🌿 #Environnement l Face à l'urgence climatique, @Francetele > poursuit son engagement et lance le #JournalMétéoClimat ! >
> Un journal météo enrichi : chiffres, analyses et reportages sur la > crise climatique. > > Dès ce soir à 20h40 sur @France2tv et 21h sur @France3tv >
pic.twitter.com/SugCS6QexQ > — France Télévisions (@Francetele) March 13, 2023 France Télévisions called upon several experts to help it make the change. This included Christophe Cassou,
a climate researcher at France’s National centre for scientific research (Centre national de la recherche scientifique), who said: “We are experiencing climate change, we can feel it in our
daily lives, now, everywhere, it is intensifying. The weather is part of this dynamic and….from now on, all France TV's weather reports will integrate this reality.” In a series of
tweets, he said: “Daily temperatures, the forecast, are influenced by planetary reheating caused by CO2 emissions by human activity. We needed to change weather forecast programmes, which
have remained largely unchanged for 30 years.” > Les fluctuations quotidiennes du temps, la météo, sont > influencées par le réchauffement planétaire dû aux émissions de > CO2 par
les activités humaines. > C’était une évidence; il fallait faire évoluer les bulletins > météo qui ont peu changé depuis 30ans. > Ça commence ce soir! > 2/ > — Christophe
Cassou (@cassouman40) March 13, 2023 CLIMATE CHANGE ‘STRATEGY’ This inclusion of climate notes is a “strategic priority” for France Télévisions, the director said. He added that this
information is already part of the news output, including its TV and magazine content. The FranceInfo website already lets users look at today’s weather, and compare it to the same day and
temperature from the past few decades, to show changing trends. The company is also taking steps to reduce climate change. Mr Kara said: “Except for extremely breaking news, we will no
longer use planes for reporters within the mainland (of France). We will ask everyone to take the train.” Staff are also set to receive training on climate change and how to save energy.
READ ALSO FRENCH TV NEWS GIVES WEATHER REPORT-STYLE ELECTRICITY USAGE UPDATES FRENCH TV PREDICTED HOT WEATHER FOR 2050…BUT WE’RE ALMOST THERE NOW