Continent méditerranéen

In the rearview of 22-med

The articles of the week of November 10 are now freely accessible. Discover the key topics: in Lebanon, rehabilitated buses are bringing public transport back to life; in Albania, a generation of chefs is reviving traditional cuisine; in Tel Aviv, innovation is facing the challenge of electronic recycling; and in Greece, science is engaging citizens to better protect the sea.

All articles published on 22-med become freely accessible after 30 days and are available in the 11 languages of the site. The most impatient can subscribe to access content as soon as it is published and support an independent media.

Parisian buses to revive public transport

After decades of stagnation and road chaos, Lebanon is reconnecting with collective transport. Thanks to an unprecedented partnership between the Ministry of Public Works, RATP, and private actors, a fleet of rehabilitated buses is once again circulating in several cities across the country. An initiative that brings hope to a population long deprived of public and sustainable mobility.

Albanian cuisine brought up to date

“At the Albanian table, we do not only eat bread — we eat history.” This proverb alone summarizes the cuisine of the country. However, for years, the local culinary art seemed to have lost its voice. In cities and villages, plates were increasingly filled with foreign flavors — from Italian pizza to Turkish kebabs — while traditional dishes existed only in family memories. Recently, a new generation of chefs, farmers, and entrepreneurs is fighting for the return of Albanian flavors to the table. A more modern and appealing cuisine, linking tradition with economic and cultural development.

How to recycle electronic waste in Tel Aviv?

Tel Aviv, a flagship symbol of the start-up nation, has established itself for two decades as one of the most dynamic technological hubs in the world. Companies there design chips, software, drones, and connected devices. But behind this innovation, another reality is emerging: that of a growing mountain of electronic waste, a paradoxical reflection of a country at the forefront of digital progress… and lagging in its environmental management. In the face of this contradiction, Get-RE, a young local company, offers an unprecedented solution to recycle mobile phones and transform waste into resources.

Mission Greece: #2 When science engages citizens

The "Greece" mission has not only accumulated data (see our section #1). It has tested concrete ways to act by involving the relevant stakeholders, such as sailors and fishermen, and also addressing the general public through children. From the EXOFISHMED program to the SailingBox, from participatory bathymetry to workshops, the common thread of the scientific expedition has been to make knowledge concrete and shareable. The political goal, championed by Monaco, is to increase Marine Protected Areas in the Mediterranean by 30% by 2030.