France in Focus - Scientists on the Front Line in Climate Change Ocean Research
8 Articles
8 Articles
France in focus - Scientists on the front line in climate change ocean research
Ahead of the United Nations Oceans Conference in Nice, our reporters went to meet some of the French scientists working to better understand and preserve the ocean. From high-tech robots 6,000m below sea level to critical mineral exploration in the Pacific, the team takes a look at some of the initiatives across the country. They also explore how cuts to climate change projects in the US are having an impact in France.
More than 2,000 scientists are gathered in Nice as part of the One Ocean Science Congress. A few days before the opening of the third United Nations conference on the Ocean, which takes place from 9 to 13 June in the same French city, the scientific committee of this Congress has published a manifesto. It makes recommendations to better protect this ocean, a "common good essential to support life and prosperity" on earth.
Global Scientific Community Urges World Leaders to Transform Research Into Policy Ahead of UN Ocean Conference - Inside Climate News
At the One Ocean Science Congress, scientists offer ten key recommendations for protecting and restoring marine ecosystems suffering from climate change, biodiversity loss and pollution.By Teresa TomassoniNICE, France—As world leaders prepare to attend the third U.N. Ocean Conference here next week, scientists are urging them to take action to combat a dual climate and biodiversity crisis plaguing marine ecosystems, and base their decisions on t…
EXCLUSIVE MAINTENANCE — For the tenant of the Quai d'Orsay, the UN conference must put our country and Europe on the front line in the preservation of common goods ten years after the Paris agreement.
In an interview conducted by the editor Denis Carreaux and Frédéric Maurice, the head of the publishing agency of the Nice metropolis, Agnès Pannier-Runacher recalled the importance of the oceans for human life and the need for international governance to protect them.
The underwater world resonates constantly. Sounds produced by the species that inhabit it, but also by those generated by human activity. Producer Maximes Dangles seized these sounds for a project combining art and science. A sound creation that he told us in 2022, as part of a series that we republished a few days before the United Nations Conference on the Nice Ocean (9-13 June).
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 67% of the sources are Center
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium