Paris to slap low speed limit on congested ring road

featured-image

Drivers on Paris' vital, congested ring road will be limited to speeds of 50 km per hour from October, the French capital's mayor Anne Hidalgo said on Monday, triggering outrage among opponents. As well as raising hackles among drivers and conservatives, the Socialist mayor also faces an uphill battle for approval from the national government and police. That showdown is in suspense for now, as freshly-installed Prime Minister Michel Barnier selects his ministers.

Crucial for road travel throughout the wider Ile-de-France region, Paris's Boulevard Peripherique -- known familiarly as the 'Periph' -- is under the authority of the capital's city hall. "The 50 kph (limit) is my decision. It will happen on October 1.



We've been working on it for 18 years, this isn't a new topic," Hidalgo told broadcaster RTL. A lower speed limit has been on the cards since January, when city hall said it would come in after the July-September Olympic and Paralympic Games that ended on Sunday. But the transport ministry has insisted that only the government can officially change the speed limit by issuing a decree, as the city's power does not extend to the nationwide rules of the road.

Paris' government-appointed police chief Laurent Nunez has also said he has a role to play. Hidalgo's plans were decided "unilaterally" and "do not respect any of the recommendations" of a past report on the Peripherique, Conservative Republicans on the Paris city council wrote on X Monday..