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France’s Macron pledges to replant Fontainebleau forest after devastating fire

By Thomson Reuters Jul 16, 2026 | 6:57 AM

PARIS, July 16 (Reuters) – French President Emmanuel Macron pledged to replant the historic Fontainebleau forest south of Paris ​on Thursday after wildfires scorched ‌at least 10% of the 20,000-hectare domain and forced 1,000 residents to flee.

• The fire is now contained but Macron warned ‌it ​would take several weeks ⁠for it to ⁠be completely extinguished.

• “Your forest is our forest because it is a treasure,” Macron said in Fontainebleau as he announced ​the launch of a fundraising campaign to replant the forest. “It is ⁠a treasure for ⁠welcoming people and for biodiversity.”

• ​The fundraising campaign is led by the ​Fontainebleau municipality, the National Forest Office (ONF) ‌and the Fondation du Patrimoine, Macron said.

• The Fontainebleau forest is a former royal hunting ground that later ⁠became a celebrated subject for Impressionist painters and attracts hikers, nature lovers and climbers to ⁠its famous ‌boulders.

• In 2019 Macron ⁠made a similar pledge to ​rebuild ‌Notre-Dame cathedral after a blaze ​devastated large ⁠parts of the gothic gem. Notre-Dame reopened in 2024 after individual, corporate and private donors pledged nearly €900 million in donations.

(Reporting by Dominique Vidalon; Editing by ​Makini Brice)