Women of the Sea
- Professor Deborah Greaves and an international team of scientists completed ten ocean-focused recommendations during the One Ocean Science Congress held in Nice, ahead of the UNOC-3 conference in June 2025.
- These recommendations respond to pressures including climate change, pollution, biodiversity loss, and overexploitation threatening ocean health worldwide.
- UNOC-3, held in Nice from June 9 to 13, will gather governments and diverse stakeholders to adopt the Nice Ocean Action Plan and spur voluntary commitments.
- The plan aligns with the 2022 Kunming-Montreal Framework, aiming to protect at least 30% of marine ecosystems by 2030 amid rising sea temperatures and ongoing coral bleaching.
- UNOC-3 represents a pivotal opportunity to advance measurable ocean conservation actions, emphasizing scalable and regenerative solutions to secure a sustainable ocean economy.
15 Articles
15 Articles
Women of the sea
In a special edition to mark the UN Oceans Conference being held here in France, we're focusing on the women of the sea; be they sailors, explorers or working in the merchant navy. In a world long dominated by men, there is now a wave of talented women who are turning the tide.
Overfishing, pollution, global warming... Faced with threats to the oceans, it is necessary to take concrete measures. But the meeting that opens on Monday 9 June in Nice, in the absence of the world's first maritime power, does not seem able to overthrow the table.
Next week in Nice the Ocean Conference (UNOC3) will take place in Nice, France, where all the commitments and strategies to address the care of marine ecosystems and to ensure their survival and conservation will be put on the table. That is why more than two hundred environmental organisations are calling for these commitments to be firm and not to remain in mere reflection in this forum. Oceans, seas and marine fauna "are increasingly threaten…
Pollution, destruction of biodiversity, climate change, all threats that are in the process of disrupting an essential environment for the functioning of our planet: the ocean. As the discussions on the future of the oceans begin on 9 June in Nice, within the framework of the...


How can international law help climate change? This question is at the heart of a historic report that the International Court of Justice is soon presenting – initiated by the island state of Vanuatu. In line with the UN-Ocean Conference in Nice, the fate of the most vulnerable regions is once again brought to the fore.
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- 50% of the sources lean Left, 50% of the sources are Center
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