Cannes is a coastal city with 75,000 inhabitants, located in the south-east of France on the Mediterranean Sea. This global city is known worldwide for its International Film Festival. Unsurprisingly, as Cannes' beautiful coastline makes it look like a film backdrop.
Cannes is a great example of a “global village” – a small city with a global reach – which welcomes 3 million visitors per year, spanning leisure and business tourists. In fact, Cannes is the second-largest conference host in France, behind only Paris.
Cannes has extraordinary natural heritage, including the Lérins Islands, one of its most beautiful attractions, which is managed following the ‘SMILO’ small, sustainable island approach.
This natural heritage is, in part, why the City of Cannes launched an environmental charter in 2004, and then a local Agenda 21 in 2008, followed by an updated Agenda 21 in 2015.
As a territory subject to flooding and the risk of marine submersion, Cannes also participates in the European UNaLab project to fight climate change using nature-based solutions.
The City of Cannes is implementing a number of actions to preserve marine biodiversity, including the establishment of fish nurseries in its ports, and the installation of “The sea begins here” plaques near rainwater outlets. Of particular note is the development of a Charter for Sustainable Cruises in the Cannes Bay (right: image from signing).
This charter, created in July 2019 and signed by all the cruise companies that travel to Cannes, imposes four requirements on ships:
This is the most environmentally strict charter in the Mediterranean, which holds great potential given that 430,000 cruise passengers were welcomed in Cannes in 2019 alone.
“Approaching all municipal actions through the lens of environmental protection and sustainable development is imperative today. We must do this for future generations who lend us this world, for the flora and fauna with which we share it, in solidarity with all social and economic classes, and for the liveability of our cities. It is for all these reasons that at Cannes we have chosen to act.”
David Lisnard, Mayor of Cannes
Cannes has been a member of ICLEI since September 2020 and is involved in a working group as part of the EVERYWH2ERE project – a project in which ICLEI Europe is a partner – on the topic of developing hydrogen generators.
With ICLEI's support, Cannes hopes to host an event in its Palais des Festivals et des Congrès, bringing together the Mediterranean cities that are ICLEI Members to discuss common issues, and, in particular, the necessity of putting in place a pollutant emissions regulatory zone in the Mediterranean Sea.
All images courtesy of the City of Cannes; all images © Mairie de Cannes.