294 communes declared natural disaster after floods in the west

Sébastien Lecornu announced that 294 communes in western France will be recognized as being in a state of natural disaster following the floods of the past two weeks. Among them, 63 are in Lot-et-Garonne, 77 in Maine-et-Loire, and 91 in Gironde. The government pledges full mobilization to support affected mayors and residents.

Sébastien Lecornu, Minister for Ecological Transition, announced on February 24, 2026, that 294 communes will be recognized as being in a state of natural disaster following the major floods that struck western France over the past two weeks. This decision comes after a meeting of a dedicated commission, during which the first dossiers from affected communes were reviewed.

Among these communes, 63 are located in Lot-et-Garonne, 77 in Maine-et-Loire, and 91 in Gironde, Lecornu specified on the platform X. "77 dossiers are adjourned to allow communes to complete their files; they will be re-examined at the commissions on March 3 and 10," he added. The decree recognizing the state of natural disaster will be published the following day, he concluded, emphasizing that "the government remains fully mobilized alongside the mayors and residents affected by the floods".

This measure follows a promise of rapid compensation made by the government at the end of last week. France's record series of 40 consecutive days of rain ended on Monday, but the floods persist despite signs of improvement. According to Météo-France, the maximum alert began 14 days ago in Gironde and Lot-et-Garonne, before extending north to Loire-Atlantique.

On Tuesday afternoon, the red flood vigilance remained in effect in Charente-Maritime and Maine-et-Loire, while Charente and Loire-Atlantique were on orange alert. Sarthe has moved to yellow vigilance. Vigicrues states that the absence of significant rain until Thursday is favoring a gradual recession on most rivers, although the risk of overflow persists near areas on orange or red vigilance.

Relaterade artiklar

Dramatic illustration of Storm Pedro hitting France with floods, heavy snow, avalanches, and strong winds.
Bild genererad av AI

Storm Pedro approaches France amid floods and heavy snow

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

France faces extreme weather with widespread floods, heavy snowfall, and a deadly avalanche in Savoie. Storm Pedro, expected Wednesday and Thursday, risks worsening conditions with strong winds and heavy rains. Authorities urge vigilance in several regions.

Depression Ingrid, which caused intense rains, strong winds, and flooding in Brittany, is losing intensity on Saturday, but flood risks persist due to saturated soils. Orange flood alerts remain in place for Finistère, Morbihan, and Ille-et-Vilaine. In Quimperlé, a very slow decline is expected after a new flood peak.

Rapporterad av AI

The French government under Sébastien Lecornu has imposed a moratorium on water policy decisions, favoring agro-industry interests. This affects the Vilaine basin's local water commission, which adopted a SAGE project in March 2025. State representatives must explain on March 13 before this body.

São Paulo's Civil Defense activated its crisis cabinet to monitor intense rains affecting the state's northern coast since Saturday. Three highways were closed due to landslides and risks of further incidents, while a man is missing after a embankment collapsed on his house in Natividade da Serra. On the coast, two people died in a shipwreck in Ubatuba, and hundreds of homes were flooded.

Rapporterad av AI

Storm Nils has brought heavy snowfall to the French Alps, placing the entire massif at maximum avalanche risk (5/5) on Thursday, February 12, 2026. Several major ski resorts, such as Tignes, have closed their domains and confined residents. Four deaths have been reported in Savoie over three days due to avalanches.

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj