Practical information
Petit déjeuner débat autour de Stephen L. Johnson, administrateur à l'Agence américaine pour la protection de l'environnement (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency - EPA). Présidence : Jacques Mistral, directeur des études économiques à l'ifri, ancien ministre conseiller à l'Ambassade de France à Washington.
Les orateurs s'exprimeront en anglais.
Biologiste de formation, Stephen L. Johnson a fait la majeure partie de sa carrière au sein de l'Administration américaine et de l'Environmental Protection Agency, avant d'y être nommé en janvier 2005, Administrateur. Depuis la nomination de Stephen L. Johnson, l'agence a mis en place de nombreux programmes pour la protection de l'environnement, et en particulier pour la réduction des polluants atmosphériques : les Etats-Unis sont ainsi devenus en 2005, la première nation au monde à réglementer ses émissions de mercure. Stephen L. Johnson a par ailleurs reçu plusieurs prix dont le prestigieux "Presidential Rank Award".
Other events
Strategic Autonomy and Asia amid Rising Geoeconomic Competition
Amid growing strategic and geopolitical uncertainty, Europe is grappling with the notion of its strategic autonomy. For Europe’s partners in Asia, the concept is also becoming increasingly salient as the world enters an era of structural transformation.
Navigating the Taiwan Strait Tensions: Perspectives from Japan, the Philippines, and France
As tensions continue to rise in the Taiwan Strait and discussions grow about hybrid frictions potentially escalating into a kinetic conflict in the coming years, neighboring countries are bracing for impact. Japan and the Philippines would be on the front lines if a crisis were to erupt in the Taiwan Strait. Both nations are closely monitoring the situation and preparing for a range of contingency scenarios. Their bilateral relations and security cooperation have deepened rapidly, alongside expanding trilateral defense coordination with their shared ally, the United States.
France-Germany, The Engine Under Pressure
Annual Conference of The Study Committe on Franco-German Relations (Cerfa) ─ Faced with a profoundly disrupted strategic and economic environment, Franco-German cooperation is more than ever the central pillar of Europe's future. The war in Ukraine, energy and technological dependence, and uncertainty about the strength of the transatlantic ties require urgent deepening of European sovereignty, both in terms of defence and economic and industrial competitiveness.