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A French town is spending $6,000 on warm jackets for hundreds of kids as temperatures fall in classrooms amid energy crisis, report says

Oct 4, 2022, 17:18 IST
Business Insider
The mayor of Périers said the town is buying fleeces for 350 schoolchildren to stay warm as classroom temperatures drop amid energy crisis, per France Bleu.Getty Images
  • A French town is buying hundreds of fleece jackets to help children to keep warm in their classrooms.
  • Mayor Gabriel Daube said temperatures in public buildings are set to fall to 19 degrees.
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A town in France is investing $6,000 in jackets for hundreds of schoolchildren because the classroom temperature has plummeted amid the energy crisis.

The mayor of Périers, a small town in the north-west of the country, discussed the plan on French radio station France Bleu.

In the face of a potential energy shortage this winter, officials in Périers have decided to turn down the heating in public buildings to 19C (66F), Gabriel Daube told France Bleu. He added that 19 degrees was bearable, but if it becomes very cold then fleece jackets would be useful for children in classrooms.

Daube said 350 children would benefit. "A bit like how a region gives a computer or a county gives a dictionary, we are giving a fleece to each student," he said in the interview.

"It is necessary for students to feel good in order to learn," Daube added.

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Daube and Ville de Périers didn't immediately respond to Insider's request for comment made outside of normal working hours.

Périers, like many other towns and cities in Europe, has adopted energy-saving measures, including turning down the heating, as the continent grapples with short supplies of energy.

The measures come as Russia holds back gas supplies to Europe through the Nord Stream pipelines after the West imposed sanctions on Moscow after President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine in February.

In the past week, the natural-gas pipelines were damaged, causing leaks and eruptions of methane plumes. Experts told Insider's John Haltiwanger that the pipeline ruptures were likely to be acts of Russian sabotage.

The resulting energy crunch has forced governments, banks, and other businesses in Europe to cut power consumption ahead of winter, by switching off lights and reducing water usage. Finland urged people to spend less time in saunas and showers, while Italians were encouraged to cook their pasta with the stove turned off to reduce energy bills.

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