Paris Mayor Anne Hidalgo Promises To Swim in Seine Before Olympics

The Seine is at the heart of both Paris and the 2024 Olympic organizers’ plans for the summer’s upcoming Games. But despite a billion dollar plan to clean up the iconic river, its water quality has been a major source of concern for Paris 2024 organizers. Poor water quality forced organizers to cancel the Open Water Swimming World Cup in August 2023, which was the Olympic test event. Later, the poor water quality was attributed to a faulty sewer valve upstream.

Earlier this month, Paris mayor Anne Hidalgo announced she will take a “historic dip” in the Seine before the Games begin. Swimming in the Seine has been banned since 1923. But a major part of the “Swimming Plan” is the river cleanup’s legacy. City officials are planning to have three public open-air swimming pools open by summer 2025.

Hidalgo’s promise echoes the one made by Jacques Chirac in 1990, when he was also Paris’ mayor. Chirac promised a grand clean-up of the Seine, which he would celebrate by swimming in the river “in front of witnesses” by 1993. Chirac died in 2019 without putting a toe in the river, leaving his promise unfulfilled.

A year after his death, the Olympic bid revitalized Chirac’s dream. And in her address to reporters at City Hall, Hidalgo referenced Chirac’s promise. “Everyone said it was impossible and we’ve done it,” she declared. “We are going to swim in the Seine…more than 30 years after Jacques Chirac’s promise.”

The Seine is essential to the Paris Games. Not only will it host the Opening Ceremonies, but triathletes and open water swimmers will set off from the Alexandre III bridge during the Olympics and the Paralympics.

Even after the cancelled test event, organizers maintain there is no alternate plan for where to hold open water events if pollution in the Seine is too high. Several more measures should be in place by this summer. That includes the currently under-construction Austerlitz storage basin. When completed, it and the connected tunnel will hold 13.2 million gallons of water.

But, even with a completed tank and a malfunction-free sewage system, rain could still derail organizers’ plans. Paris’ sewer system funnels both rainwater and wastewater. Both get released into the Seine when storms overwhelm the system. According to Samuel Colin-Canivez, the city’s lead engineer for the sewage plans, this happens about 12 times a year.

If it rains the entire week before the Games, Hidalgo’s Deputy of Sport Pierre Rabadan told The New York Times in 2023 “[we] know the quality of the water—even with all the work we’ve done—probably won’t be excellent.” If the Austerlitz tank is full, organizers will have to postpone, wait a few days, and test the water quality again.

But now it isn’t just Olympians who will be awaiting word for the river’s water quality. Hidalgo will be planning her swim too, as she attempts to keep Chirac’s promise from 34 years ago.

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Jess
11 months ago

Ew. A “dip” where she won’t even get her face wet is hella different from people swimming a 10k!

Sapiens Ursus
11 months ago

Rio all over again for open water sigh…

Look it was a great gesture to invest in cleaning it up but we can value safety over spectacle it’s fairly common to have some olympic events a fair bit away from the official host.

Seth
11 months ago

I have swam in some dirty places before, the Cedar River in Iowa being one. I wouldn’t recommend.

It would be good to test for contaminants, ecoli, salmonella, etc.

If not the Seine I bet there’s a beautiful lake in the mountain side with a scenic view, (won’t be Paris as scenery) but mountains could do.

Viking Steve
11 months ago

Better her than me….

TXSwimDad
11 months ago

“Even after the cancelled test event, organizers maintain there is no alternate plan for where to hold open water events if pollution in the Seine is too high.” I really hope this isn’t true. Can it possibly be?

zThomas
Reply to  TXSwimDad
11 months ago

I do not think this is correct and want to know the source. There is a contingency plan for the triathlon swim and that involves moving a lot more than the 10K race.

Admin
Reply to  TXSwimDad
11 months ago

These Olympics have learned from past Games, which is namely, the best way to handle the problems, from the perspective of the host, in the leadup to the Games is to not speak about them publicly. When you speak about them publicly, they take on second and third lives. See the bickering over the transportation issues, which are objectively a problem, and in some cases were a known problem before the bid was won – any time an official brings them up, they are ravaged by their colleagues over it.

So my guess is that there is an alternate plan for where to hold the open water events in the sense that there are places in France that have previously… Read more »

Ldn
Reply to  Braden Keith
11 months ago

at the end of the day, people swim across the channel regularly for infamy…it can’t be that polluted all along the channel coast…there’s also ( on top of braden Keith’s suggestions) the Atlantic and southern coast which are popular with tourists and swimmers….but 1923 is a very defeating number…101 years of unsafe water

2Fat4Speed
11 months ago

Does not mean anything unless she swims a 10k.

DLswim
Reply to  2Fat4Speed
11 months ago

Swimswam forgot to post her best times!

xman
11 months ago

Mayor can go right ahead. So what lake or body of water are they relocating the open water swimming to after the mayor gets hospitlized for a newly discovered bacteria?

About Sophie Kaufman

Sophie Kaufman

Sophie grew up in Boston, Massachusetts, which means yes, she does root for the Bruins, but try not to hold that against her. At 9, she joined her local club team because her best friend convinced her it would be fun. Shoulder surgery ended her competitive swimming days long ago, …

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