Give the example.
Because if the French are regularly summoned to show energy sobriety, then there is little reason for the political class to escape it.
Some deputies still remember the images of engines purring in the courtyard of the Élysée, in the middle of the Council of Ministers, last summer.
“With the air conditioning on full
sigh today an elected official from the presidential camp.
It's just not possible, what…”
So Parliament in turn wants to prove that it wants to go green.
The President of the National Assembly, Yaël Braun-Pivet, has also taken up the subject by launching, last August, a transpartisan working group on sustainable development.
Before unveiling the sobriety plan to which the Lower House submitted this winter.
And, according to the report of this same working group, submitted on March 21, the results are there.
On average, energy consumption at the Palais Bourbon was reduced by 15% in October, November, December, etc.
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