Searching for radioactive waste in the depths of the Atlantic – France 24

Container (metal or concrete drums) of low-level radioactive waste, in the North-East Atlantic dumping zone (NEA zone), between 4,500 and 4,700 m deep, 1984 (courtesy of Fûts de déchets faiblement radioactifs en Altantique Nord-Est CC BY 4.0 via Wikimedia).

For nearly five decades, more than 200,000 barrels of radioactive waste were dumped in the icy depths of the northeast Atlantic. Today, no one knows precisely where these barrels are located, or what kind of state they are in. On June 15, a French-led team of scientists will set sail from Brittany in a bid to map the barrels and assess their impacts on surrounding marine ecosystems…

Ghana’s vanishing coast: Climate change is eroding historic site – France 24

A view of the ruins of an ancient European fort at Keta. The devastation of the fort is largely due to sea erosion in the Keta area 2012 (by Gameli Adzaho Gameli Adzaho, CC BY-SA 3.0 via Wikimedia).

In the Ghanaian city of Keta, a key part of the country’s history there is under threat from climate change. Fort Prinz en-stein, which was once a grim clog in the transatlantic slave trade, is now a shell of itself because of rising seas levels, relentless erosion and human neglect. Activists are now urging the government to act fast to preserve the UNESCO world heritage site…