Ramoge Agreement marks 50 years with Monaco State Ministry show
By Zak Jackson, MonacoViews Editorial
Monaco's National Archives have co-organised an exhibition at the Ministry of State tracing five decades of the tripartite Ramoge Agreement to protect the Mediterranean.
The Ramoge Agreement, the tripartite environmental pact binding Monaco, France and Italy in the shared stewardship of the Ligurian and Provençal coastline, turns fifty this year. To mark the anniversary, Monaco's National Archives have co-organised an exhibition inside the Ministry of State that charts the accord's half-century of action on marine pollution, coastal protection and cross-border environmental governance.
The exhibition traces how Ramoge evolved from a relatively modest bilateral framework into a reference model for regional sea protection in the wider Mediterranean. For residents and property owners along Monaco's waterfront, the agreement has shaped everything from water-quality standards in the Port Hercule basin to the regulatory environment governing yacht discharges in Monegasque waters.
The show is open at the Ministry of State on Place de la Visitation. No admission details were given in the announcement, but the National Archives can be contacted directly for visiting hours and any accompanying programme of events tied to the jubilee.