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France

Political Groups
G20, OECD, EU
Global Climate Risk Index
52.5
Targets
World Bank Income Group
High income
Share of Global Emissions
0.71%

Documents

2025Legislative
Environmental Code

The Environmental Code contains various provisions relating to climate, including: Prohibitions on advertising relating to the marketing or promotion of fossil fuels, punishable by fines, and mandatory display of information on the environmental impact for goods and services (Article L229-61 to 67); Responsibilities of the High Council for Climate, an independent body att...

2025Policy
3rd National Climate Change Adaptation Plan (2025)

This Plan has the objectives of protecting the population and building the resilience of society. It contains 52 measures for all sectors of activity, with 200 concrete actions in the short, medium and long term to adapt France and its overseas territories, to the visible and expected impacts of climate change: heat waves, floods, droughts, shrinkage-swelling of clays, coa...

2025UNFCCC Submission
France National Inventory Report (NIR). 2025

France National Inventory Report (NIR). 2025

Legislative Process

France has a bicameral parliamentary system where legislative power belongs to the National Assembly and the Senate. The last election for the National Assembly was held in 2017, the next is scheduled for 2022. The Senate is elected indirectly by Members of Parliament and local representatives. Statute legislation may be proposed by the Council of Ministers or by Members of Parliament; the majority of bills are currently proposed by the government.

There is a strict separation between laws and regulations. Laws determine general principles and rules in domains explicitly set out in the constitution, such as civil rights, nationality and crime. They must be voted on by the Parliament and can be blocked by the Constitutional Court if it finds that the law goes against the Constitution. In this case, the law must be modified and voted on again, or abandoned. Regulations can establish rules out­side of the law’s domain or specify more precisely how to implement laws. Regulations do not need to be voted on by the Parliament.