Prince Albert II marks 50 years of the RAMOGE Agreement
By Zak Jackson, MonacoViews Editorial
Monaco commemorated the 50th anniversary of the RAMOGE Agreement on 26 June, with Prince Albert II leading events celebrating five decades of trilateral Mediterranean environmental cooperation.
On 26 June, Monaco marked fifty years since the signing of the RAMOGE Agreement, the landmark environmental accord that binds Monaco, France and Italy in a shared commitment to protecting the Ligurian and north-western Mediterranean Sea. Prince Albert II led the commemorations, which brought together senior figures from all three signatory nations for a programme of events underscoring the Principality's long-standing role at the centre of Mediterranean environmental governance.
The RAMOGE framework, established in 1976, coordinates action on marine pollution, shipping risks and coastal ecosystems across the stretch of sea running from Saint-Raphaël to Genoa, with Monaco sitting at its geographic and institutional heart. Over five decades it has developed into one of the most durable examples of cross-border environmental cooperation in the region, covering everything from hydrocarbon spill response to the monitoring of cetacean populations in the Pelagos Sanctuary.
For Monaco residents and property owners, the anniversary is a reminder of how directly the Principality's quality of life and maritime environment are shaped by these international commitments. The clean waters off the Hercule and Fontvieille ports, and the broader health of the coastline, owe a measurable debt to the standards and coordination mechanisms the RAMOGE Agreement has sustained across half a century.