Avec une contribution de 7 % au total mondial des émissions de gaz à effet de serre (GES), la Méditerranée est parmi les plus vulnérables aux effets du changement climatique La technologie, le financement, la responsabilité de réduction des GE...
Il existe un haut niveau d'interdépendance énergétique : le Sud en tant que fournisseur et le Nord en tant qu'importateur peuvent contribuer à un développement conjoint Le conflit entre la Russie et l'Ukraine en 2009 a mis en évidence l'importa...
Des problèmes techniques, économiques et géopolitiques – les stratégies russe et américaine – limitent les possibilités de voir la Turquie devenir un ‘hub’ énergétique.
The Mediterranean energy picture captures in microcosm many of the issues facing the global energy market today.
Tourism and heritage have merged together in the Mediterranean to provide an exceptional environment that supports the blossoming of holidays, leisure and play.
In recent months the media has rediscovered the agro-food sector as an economic sector of the first order, occupying a strategic place in its two aspects of food and energy.
The urban transition in developing countries is telescoping time, needing just a few decades to do what took a century or more in the industrialized countries.
In addition to the substantial acreages devastated by fire, the summer of 2007 was equally noted for the very heavy human death toll.
Water is at the core of the problem of sustainable development. Its management in the Mediterranean area is characterised by non-sustainable forms of production and consumption.
In the light of observational evidence of mean air and ocean temperature rises and the disappearance of glaciers and perennial snows, as well as average sea-level rises, planetary warming is indisputable.
The potential for water conflicts over transboundary, shared, or international waters (as some countries prefer to call them) is increasing as population, development, and the demand for water increase.