Marlène Schiappa - Paris, Île-de-France, France | Profil professionnel | LinkedIn (original) (raw)
Associée de TILDER + Présidente d'ACTIVES #NextWomen40 ONG + Ministre d'Emmanuel Macron 7 ans + Présidente de Maman travaille 10 ans + Elue de Paris + Romancière + Dernier livre: Les Droits des femmes au travail
Paris, Île-de-France, France Coordonnées
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- Quynh-Anh (Quin-Anne) To Last month, I had the chance to go to the #MonacoOceanWeek 🇲🇨 with local & international experts and civil society organizations, including professionals from the Ocean & Climate Platform, to attend their two side-events related to public policies implemented by the French Secretariat of State for the Sea and Biodiversity (Secrétariat d’État chargé de la Mer et de la Biodiversité) and also to interview professionals in the field: 1️⃣ Adapting coastal cities and communities to tackle sea level rise 🌊 Global sea level rise is caused by the increased melting of land-based ice, such as glaciers and ice sheets. With ocean warming and high levels of greenhouse gas emissions, sea level will continue to rise at higher rates, according to experts. This phenomenon results in extreme weather events and major repercussions for coastal cities: land loss, flooding, coastal erosion, ecosystem degradation, and so on. In its Global Risks Report 2024 (https://lnkd.in/epZpQCgf), World Economic Forum showed us that extreme weather events were seen as “the second-most severe risk over the two-year time frame", and also, nearly all environmental risks featured among the 10 global risks over the longer term (ten-years time frame): extreme weather events, critical change to Earth systems, and biodiversity loss. Sea level rise and coastal adaptation still remain under-addressed but they recently have been defined as a clear political priority. They will be addressed and discussed at the next United Nations Ocean Conference #UNOC3 🇺🇳in Nice in June 2025, during an inaugural international event. ➡️To better understand this phenomenon with Lisa Devignol : https://lnkd.in/eYbAJB9p 2️⃣ “Let's Be Nice to the Ocean”: an initiative to prepare for the UNOC 3 In June 2025, the Governments of France and Costa Rica 🇫🇷🇨🇷 will co-organize the third UN Ocean Conference in Nice. They have mandated Remi Parmentier (The Varda Group) and Loreley Picourt (Ocean & Climate Platform) to co-facilitate the participation of civil society in Nice. Civil society organizations play a crucial role in ocean governance, their voices need to be heard and their ideas need to be taken into account. 💬They were invited to share their innovative, actionable and relevant ideas to https://lnkd.in/e7M_igSS in order to protect the ocean. 🔔Find out more about this initiative (all the interviews are in English with French subtitles) : - Interview with Rémi Parmentier on “3 immediate opportunities” : The Deep Sea, Antarctica and the Southern Ocean and the Mediterranean : https://lnkd.in/e7KhUvFj - Interview with Loreley Picourt on the role of #civilsociety organizations ⬇️ #UNOceanConference #sealevelrise #coastaladaptation
- Metzineres 🟣We Metzineres integrate the campaign to end the widespread and discriminatory application of petty misdemeanors in Europe, together with (RE)Claim, MCDS, Observatoire pour les Droits des Citoyens Itinérants (France), Collective Justice, Bündnis zur Abschaffung der Ersatzfreiheitsstrafe (Germany), Hungarian Helsinki Committee (Hungary), CILD and Progetto (Italy). Minor offenses include low-level theft, begging, migration status, loitering, drug offenses, public order offenses and more. Across Europe, impoverished and marginalized people, drug users, sex workers and those suffering from vectors of oppression and #violence are increasingly criminalized and punished for these types of minor offenses, often without basic procedural rights such as access to a lawyer, and sentenced with increased penalties, exposing the systemic injustice that falls on the most vulnerable people. These types of convictions have a huge significant impact on people's lives, including insurmountable fines, jail, loss of custody of their children, negative immigration consequences, and further exclusion, violence, and vulnerability. 🔊 In the context of the EU Parliament elections, we Metzineres raise our voices to demand an end to these injustices and call on candidates to commit to #justice. ⚖️ Read more 👉
- Faustine Bas-Defossez And also in English for the non French speaking ones ! Two weeks ago, BLOOM Association and foodwatch France joined forces to warn of the health risks linked to the consumption of tuna. Thanks to these organizations, #mercury pollution and its toxicity were in the spotlight. If an immediate way to no longer be contaminated is stop eating tuna, this is unfortunately not enough to eradicate the problem of #mercury pollution. ⁉️ 🤔 But where are we with #mercury pollution? Contrary to popular belief, mercury did not disappear when we stopped using the 'unfamous' mercury thermometers. Many human activities release very large quantities of mercury: mercury levels present in the atmosphere are up to 500% higher than natural levels (200% for the oceans). Being considered one of the chemicals of extreme public health concern, #mercury found in water is easily ingested by animals (fish but also birds) and therefore.. ultimately... by... humans. especially when eating predatory fish - tuna but also swordfish! But what human activities are we talking about and what are we doing to stop them? 👍 Let's start with the good news: ✅ First, the Minamata Convention: An international treaty, which entered into force in 2017, which aims to protect human health and the environment against the harmful effects of mercury. Its name is sadly known because of Minamata disease (Japan) - a neurological disease causing blindness, congenital malformations, paralysis, etc. - which struck the inhabitants of this coastal town following the spill (by a chemical factory) of liquids containing high concentrations of methylmercury for decades. This Convention is still work in progress in terms of implementation but it is an instrumental tool at international level in the fight against #mercury toxic pollution! ✅ The EU then: Last summer a regulation allowing us to make considerable progress in this fight was adopted. The regulation prohibits (with some exceptions) the use of mercury in dental amalgam (yes, some people have mercury in their mouths) as well as in lamps. While these progresses are encouraging, the battle is not over! 💪 And I am extremely proud of the work carried out by my organization European Environmental Bureau in recent years. Indeed our work, led by the excellent Elena Lymberidi-Settimo, has been and remains instrumental in this battle. 🚨 Now on the bad news: the battle is not over indeed! And currently there is another use that we are fighting against: mercury added in skin lightening creams! 💄 ☠️ They enter the EU via e-commerce. Not only does their production pollute our oceans and our food, but it is also very toxic for users who put it directly on their skin!!! And indeed as mercury damages the nervous system, long-term use of mercury-added skin cream may damage the eyes, lungs, kidneys, digestive and immune systems. More on this here 👇 https://lnkd.in/eZpQ7n_e
- Marion Picot 💡3 debates to keep an eye on for the future of the EU’s Multiannual Financial Framework Last week, I came across the interview of Commissioner for Budget Johannes Hahn in the French newspaper Les Échos. EU correspondent Karl De Meyer captured 3 of the leading budget topics to keep an eye on in the answers of the Commissioner: 1️⃣ New own resources and repayment of the debt In the last MFF negotiations, the idea of creating new resources independent from national contributions had progressed. But despite the efforts of setting some of those resources, such as the flagship Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM, a carbon tax at the EU’s external border), the Council remains somewhat sceptical. As part of the Next Generation EU efforts deployed for the recovery from COVID-19, it was made possible for the Union to borrow €806,9 billion between 2021 and 2026. With repayment starting in 2028, the question is whether new resources will be unlocked on time or whether national contributions will remain the only conceivable option. 2️⃣ Flexibility of the Multiannual Financial Framework As outlined by Commissioner Hahn, 99% of EU resources are pre-allocated within the EU. Consequence: in the last two mandates, we have faced occurrences that made changes vital, whether it is the migration crisis, a global pandemic or a war at our borders - and those changes have been challenging to decide and implement in our institutional scheme. While there are already flexibility instruments in the MFF, i.e., adaptations of headings and programme implementation, the use of margins, a more in-depth reflection will undoubtedly be needed moving on. Otherwise, we will keep displacing capacity from one heading to another, one programme to another, with the risk that policies such as the Cohesion Policy, the Common Agricultural Policy or even the Erasmus programme are first in line to contribute. 3️⃣ Integration of new EU Member States Since December 2022, the question has been on every discussion, at least for those working on agricultural policy: when will new Member States, particularly Ukraine, join the EU - and what will be the consequences for the budget? According to the Commissioner, should the nine current candidate countries enter the EU, our budget would see an increase comprised between 20% and 30%. Making this whole debate about budget, however, would be wrong. Implications of integration have always reached far beyond financial contributions, as the celebration of the 20th EU anniversary of ten of our Member States has shown on 1st May. The interview of Commissioner Hahn is available below. ⤵️