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Game in France - L'Encéphalovore On en parle depuis des années (ici). Cette fois, c’est concret. Houdemont. Oui, Houdemont. Pas Shenzhen. Pas Ningbo. Houdemont. C’est là, en Meurthe‑et‑Moselle, que Game in France a décidé de faire un...

Game In France : Le jeu de société revient à la maison
Et si fabriquer des jeux en France redevenait la norme ?
Un projet industriel… mais aussi écologique et stratégique
www.lencephalo.com/game-in-fran...
#GameInFrance #JeuxDeSociete #MadeInFrance #Relocalisation #IndustrieLudique #BlueOrange

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Adhérer ou réadhérer à l'association - les économistes atterrés L’association permet de donner plus de force à nos idées et à notre action, afin de peser sur le débat citoyen. Vous pouvez y contribuer via une cotisation modeste, valable un an. […]

Une explication claire, limpide et le tout... En 6 minutes !

🤝 Pour adhérer et nous soutenir : www.atterres.org/adhesion/

#Pénurie #Santé #Relocalisation

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140 millions d’euros et plus de 130 emplois créés : Unither se lance dans un vaste projet «de #relocalisation industrielle et de souveraineté sanitaire»

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Etude Reloc'h : Quelles relocalisations et localisations peut-on envisager en Bretagne ?
Etude Reloc'h : Quelles relocalisations et localisations peut-on envisager en Bretagne ? YouTube video by Produit en Bretagne

En 2026 il est temps d'écouter les précurseurs de la relocalisation en France 🇫🇷

2020 Etude Reloc'h : En #Bretagne Quelles relocalisations et localisations peut-on envisag... youtube.com/watch?v=6njX... #relocalisation

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Dans la presse aujourd’hui, Benoît Fabre, patron local et ancien dirigeant du Medef défend le retour de la création de richesses à Saint-Étienne, alors que ses propres entreprises sont presque toutes installées en périphérie …

#SaintEtienne #Relocalisation #MEDEF

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Déplacer une ville : comment la Suède relocalise Kiruna pour sécuriser ses ressources Principaux renseignements La quête incessante de matières premières en Europe a un impact profond sur Kiruna, une ville suédoise située au cœur du cercle polaire arctique. La ville autrefois ordinaire subit une transformation extraordinaire à mesure que ses habitants et ses bâtiments sont systématiquement déplacés. L’expansion d’une vaste mine de fer souterraine est à l’origine […]

Déplacer une ville : comment la Suède relocalise Kiruna pour sécuriser ses ressources #Kiruna #Suède #relocalisation #ressources #mining

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French farmers petition Macron to block Mercosur trade agreement Forty-four French farmers’ organisations have signed an open letter urging President Emmanuel Macron to “clarify” France’s stance and take action to block the South American Mercosur trade agreement,…

#Mercosur C'est assez simple, pour faire capoter ce trade agreement, il suffit d'arrêter de manger du bœuf. Le bœuf argentin ne trouvant plus preneur, la circulation de viande importée comme la production française de bœuf s'arrêtera d'elle-même ! www.rfi.fr/en/france/20...

#Relocalisation
#GoVegan

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🌱 Lin et chanvre : deux cultures sobres, locales, pleines d’avenir.
Et si la Bretagne faisait de ces filières un levier de réindustrialisation écologique ? #Relocalisation #Chanvre #Lin

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Le déficit commercial français, vu par nos importations www.vers2045.com/05/09/2025/l...
#DéficitCommercial #France #Économie #Industrie #Relocalisation #BalanceCommerciale # Délocalisation #Emplois #Dettes

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Resistance Radio Interview of Rupert Read Podcast Episode · Resistance Radio · 14/04/2025 · 56m

Great to hear Derrick Jensen talking to Rupert Read @rupertread.bsky.social ✊

#TransformativeAdaptation #DeepAdaptation #Community #Resilience #Kinship #RegenerativeCulture #Health #Wellbeing #Rewilding #Bioregionalism #Permaculture #Localism #Agriwilding #Agrarianism #Collapse #Relocalisation

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Miquelon-Langlade, premier village français contraint de déménager face à la montée des océans Une décision sans précédent en France, où les effets du dérèglement climatique poussent à repenser l’occupation du littoral. Pour la première fois sur le territoire national, une localité entière va ê...

🌊 Miquelon-Langlade, premier village français contraint de déménager face à la #montée des #océans

Face au #risque de #submersion, un plan de #relocalisation a été mis en place et s’étalera sur 50 à 70 ans.

👉 l’article de Le Singulier

#niveaudesoceans #changementclimatique #saintpierreetmiquelon

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#Sanofi a reçu
➡️plus d'un 1 Md € de CIR en 10 ans
➡️l'argent du plan #Relocalisation
Mais il a
➡️supprimé des milliers d'emplois de chercheurs
➡️vendu le #Doliprane à un fonds US

E. Macron appelle "au patriotisme économique et à ne pas investir aux Etats-Unis". Résultat : ⤵️

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Enfant sur un tas d'ordures.

Enfant sur un tas d'ordures.

La mode du vêtement d'occasion n'est pas une bonne réponse écologique. Il est grand temps de produire et d'acheter durable. Et de ne pas favoriser les pays les moins-disant socialement.

lenouveauparadigme.fr/mode-de-seco...

#LNP #FastFashion #Relocalisation #Mode

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Followers of the Small Is Beautiful school of environmentalism (to which I subscribe) often critique globalization and advocate localism. The controversial new Trump tariffs seem purpose-made to choke off global trade and promote American domestic manufacturing. Am I thrilled? Let’s unpack the goals and tactics of both eco-localism and the Trump tariffs and see where there’s congruence, and where there’s contradiction. ### Where the Eco-localists Are Coming From Trade makes many folks materially better off by enabling a local abundance of resources or skills to be shared across a wider area. However, increased trade often worsens economic inequality and depletes and pollutes the environment faster than would otherwise happen. Therefore, eco-localists see trade as a mixed benefit whose unintended negative impacts must be carefully managed. Globalization of trade raises the stakes of both benefits and risks. On the risk side of the ledger, taken to the extreme, it leads to a world in which everything is for sale, all resources are depleted, pollution is everywhere, labor is exploited to the maximum degree, and everything is owned by a tiny number of super-rich investors and entrepreneurs. The scope of globalization that’s happened in the last few decades is unequaled in human history (the spread of the Roman Empire is one of several smaller-scale precursors). Corporations and banks delivered the technology and capital; trade agreements like NAFTA and trade partnerships like the EU contributed the legal framework; and fossil fuels provided abundant, concentrated, storable energy for manufacturing and transport. The result is an integrated global market in which a single product, such as a smartphone, may incorporate design elements from skilled workers in the US, raw materials from twenty countries, and assembly by poorly paid workers in China, Vietnam, or India; the phone can then be sold in scores of nations. The intended benefit is that billions of people get to use a technology that, by its very nature, requires global supply chains, internationally shared technological expertise, and stable rules of economic cooperation and investment. The unintended side effects are that a few people become unimaginably rich while nature is poisoned and people’s mental, physical, and social health deteriorates. The winners of the globalization game include a growing global billionaire class and a fast-growing middle class in China, India, and other manufacturing hubs. Middle-class consumers around the world win by getting cheap goods. Corporations and investors reap a windfall. However, society and nature are losers when globalization worsens inequality while speeding up depletion and pollution. Global economic inequality declined during some decades of the 20th century, but it did so mainly because of the Great Depression and two World Wars. Otherwise, the last century saw a relentlessly widening gap between rich and poor—a trend that has accelerated in the past two decades, not just in the US, but in China, India, and elsewhere. Indigenous cultures in less-industrialized nations are hardest hit, as globalization uproots people from traditional village life, thrusting them into cities and factories. Meanwhile, forests disappear, carbon accumulates in the atmosphere, wild creatures vanish, and floods and fires devastate more communities. The United States, the country that invented consumerism, in part to deal with a glut of production, used to be the world’s manufacturing powerhouse. But, with cheaper labor available in Asia and the “productivity” gains from automation and other technologies, the US has instead become the top global consumer, a center of global finance, the primary military superpower, and the trendsetting conductor of international rules of commerce. The share of US jobs in manufacturing has declined by 35 percent since the 1970s. And that decline has created political and social problems including political polarization, which in turn is undermining democracy in the US and other countries. Eco-localists argue that globalization is authoritarian by nature: increasingly, multinational corporations rule the world. Individuals and communities are powerless by comparison. Eco-localists make the following recommendations to governments and communities: * Incentivize cooperative, worker-owned businesses. * Promote the meeting of human needs through non-market means—i.e., the sharing economy. * Focus on the well-being of people and nature instead of simply aiming to grow GDP. * Tax the rich and provide more economic security (including education and healthcare) for lower-income people. * Re-localize production by regulating big corporations so that smaller, local producers and sellers can remain competitive. * Strengthen the rights of communities (including the rights of nature) and the fabric of democracy. ### Where the Tariff Terrorists Are Coming From The Trump tariffs are an unfolding story that changes daily. The goals of this astonishing set of new, constantly shifting trade policies are somewhat unclear, as statements by the president and other officials are sometimes contradictory. Trump himself has a longstanding fascination with tariffs, which he sees as coercive tools for achieving various international ends, not all of them economic. Trump often laments the fact that America runs a trade deficit with many nations. In Trump’s mind, any trade deficit is a loss, and he wants America to win. Here is Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, speaking on CBS News’s “Face the Nation” on Sunday, April 6: > “We’ve got to start to protect ourselves . . . and we’ve got to stop having all the countries of the world ripping us off. We have a $1.2 trillion trade deficit, and the rest of the world has a surplus with us. They’re earning our money. They’re taking our money, and Donald Trump has seen this, and he’s going to stop it.” Still, trade rebalancing doesn’t seem to be Trump’s only aim. Tariffs could be used either as a weapon to extort concessions from other nations, or as a durable source of income for the government and a way to restructure trade over the long haul, favoring US domestic manufacturers. Trump has cited both purposes. But they are fundamentally incompatible: if successfully used as a bargaining chip, then tariffs will be negotiated away and therefore will provide no long-term income to the government. If they are meant to be held in place to provide long-term income (Trump has even mooted the notion of replacing income taxes with tariffs), then there’s nothing to negotiate. As a side note, there’s one other possible motivation: tariffs—with carve-outs to specific businesses, industries, or countries—have historically been used as a tool for corruption. After the announcement of dramatically high tariffs on all nations on April 2 (dubbed “liberation day” by the administration in an Orwellian turn), the US bond market immediately saw a dramatic sell-off, causing the interest rate the government pays on its debt to soar. Trump relented, delaying most tariffs for 90 days while leaving a 10 percent tariff in place on all nations except China, which he targeted with a 145 percent tariff. China has responded with its own 125 percent tariff on all US imports. China has also cut off exports of strategic raw materials. It seems that the trade war Trump has initiated is almost entirely directed toward Beijing; much lower tariffs on other countries could conceivably be used to coerce those countries to stop doing business with China. A possible outcome would be the commercial isolation of China and the end of its rise as a global superpower capable of eclipsing the US. However, if this is indeed Trump’s goal, his strategy seems to ignore the fact that China already has a broad sphere of influence, including trade alliances with Brazil, India, Russia, South Africa, Egypt, Ethiopia, Indonesia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates (i.e., the BRICs countries). Further, engineering a clash between the US and its allies on one side and BRICs nations on the other might not end well, given the fact that Trump has already torched his country’s leadership of the western alliance through his authoritarian posturing, his undermining of NATO, and his threatening of friendly nations with enormous tariffs. We’re already seeing the European Union negotiating with China to lower trade barriers to Chinese electric vehicles. Trump’s strategy does have its cheerleaders. Here’s influencer Ken Rutkowski’s breathless paean: > “[Tariffs represent] . . . a new economic philosophy that restructures the global trade system, repositions the American worker at the core of the system, and challenges the 30 years of offshoring conventions. [They are] a decades-in-the-making strategy to restore industrial self-reliance, real wage growth, and economic security. The new playbook views tariffs as versatile tools. This regime sees them not only as revenue generators but also as negotiation triggers and economic equalizers. Protection? Yes. Leverage? Absolutely. Alignment? Finally. From Wall Street to Main Street. The endgame? A more balanced global economy where America consumes less and produces more, while China consumes more and exports less. It’s a forced rebalancing—one tariff at a time.” Trump’s tariffs are often said to benefit US workers in the long run. Yet this ostensible objective seems contradicted by the administration’s fascination with AI—which, according to Bill Gates, will eliminate all but three kinds of jobs. Further, our supposed worker-centric future is being designed by billionaires, whose interests rarely coincide with those of workers. If the Trump tariff goal is a world dominated by America, it’s an America that is itself dominated by super-wealthy elites, an America that is no longer a fully functioning democracy, an America with no checks or balances on executive power, an America with no law that its top officials are required to obey, and an America where non-citizens and potentially citizens as well can be whisked off the streets without warning and deported to foreign prisons. New York Congressman Ritchie Torres summed up the situation well: > “If a superpower were intent on engineering its own decline, it would antagonize its allies, paralyze its economy with the certainty of uncertainty, erode confidence in the world’s reserve currency, discard due process, defund medical and scientific research, sabotage the most critical form of critical manufacturing—domestic chipmaking—and grow its deficit until debt service devours the largest share of its budget.” Meanwhile, the Trump administration, steeped in hostility toward environmental protection, will not use tariffs to avert environmental catastrophe. Not only has Trump abandoned the Paris climate agreement, but his domestic policies include promoting coal mining and oil drilling, softening pollution regulations, expanding logging on federal lands, and weakening if not killing the Endangered Species Act. ### Is There Any Overlap? And What Direction Should We Embrace? Tariffs could reduce global trade, which seemingly would align with eco-localists’ aims. Perhaps tariffs could be used to protect communities and livelihoods, and as a form of economic defense against globalization. However, eco-localists tend to see tariffs as a tool of last resort, one that often has nasty unintended consequences, such as increased international hostility and higher prices for essential goods. The word “tariff” rarely shows up in books on ecological economics. However, in _Beyond Growth_ _,_ pioneer ecological economist Herman Daly did discuss tariffs briefly: > “Nearly all policies for sustainability involve internalizing external environmental and social costs at the national level. This makes prices higher. Therefore free trade with countries that do not internalize these costs, or do it to a much lesser extent, is not feasible. In such cases there is every reason for protective tariffs.” Tariffs, used protectively, could slow or even reverse globalization, providing time and wherewithal for societies to deal with the unintended side effects of recent decades of corporate-led trade expansion. However, this hinges on using tariffs explicitly and consistently to promote policies that reduce pollution, resource depletion, and unfair treatment of workers. There is nothing in the Trump team’s statements to suggest these are significant aims. Many eco-localists advocate deliberately shrinking the industrial economy to reduce its impact on nature. Shrinking the US economy is not Trump’s explicit goal, but it is an almost certain result of his tariff policies. Liberal and conservative analysts agree that trade barriers will, in David Frum’s words, “make U.S. goods more expensive to produce, costlier to buy, and inferior to the foreign competition.” But rather than reining in trade for the purpose of reducing pollution and exploitation of workers, Trump and his team seem to be intent on accelerating environmental degradation (fossil fuel products are exempt from US tariffs) and increasing economic inequality by weakening government health and safety programs and doling out lavish tax cuts to the rich. So, even though both eco-localists and Trump administration officials have at times promoted the use of tariffs, they propose using them for entirely different reasons, and, presumably, would achieve very different results. One group is concerned with protecting nature and minimizing economic inequality so that humans and other species can persist. For Trump and his team, the environment is irrelevant, and workers are chumps useful merely for gaining national power. Once achieved, that power can then be leveraged internationally through belligerent tariffs, with the goal of bludgeoning the entire world into submission. The Trump team’s maximalist power grab is certain to provoke reactions. The world has been plunged into a trade war, but trade wars have a nasty tendency to turn into shooting wars. Within the deteriorating circumstances of a world seemingly on the verge of environmental ruin and global conflict, eco-localist strategies are looking more and more sensible. While there is no likelihood of their national adoption in the US anytime soon, they are perhaps most applicable and effective at the community scale. Indeed, this is the moment when eco-localism is most desperately needed. As soaring consumer prices, supply chain disruptions, and reductions in government-provided funding and services threaten communities, localists can help bolster local markets and inspire mutual aid efforts, helping mobilize folks to take more responsibility for their own collective resilience and well-being. Image c/o Adobe Stock * * * * *

Very good fromRichard Heinberg.

How Eco-Localism Differs from Tariff Terrorism - resilience
www.resilience.org/stories/2025-04-17/how-e...
#relocalisation #eco_localism #tariffs

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[3/3] Le dossier présente cinq témoignages d'experts et d'acteurs locaux confrontés à l'élévation du niveau de la mer. Il met en avant des exemples de #relocalisation réussie et des solutions d’adaptation pensées à long terme pour renforcer la #résilience littorale. #geography #searise #littoral

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12 Mars 2020 - E. Macron : "Déléguer notre capacité à soigner à d'autres est une folie"

Derniers chiffres dispos : les importations FR de médicaments ont augmenté de 12,7% en 2023.
Sur les 508 médicaments autorisés en Europe, seuls 48 sont produits en France.
#relocalisation

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"À quoi toute cette fanfare a-t-elle servi ?", une #usine "modèle" de fabrication de #médicaments fermera ses portes en juin 2025 (Après avoir été citée comme grand exemple de #relocalisation par le président de la République au moment de la crise du #Covid,

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Le tournant covid a été raté.
Celui-ci réussira-t-il ?
#relocalisation #transitionénergétique #sobriété #démocratie

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💬 "On pensait que la production mondialisée était indestructible."
Mais le monde a changé.
🚢 Les chaînes logistiques sont devenues instables.
🌱 Les consommateurs veulent du local, du durable.
François voyait son industrie disparaître.
#Cannes2031 #Robustesse #Relocalisation

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La relocalisation industrielle, pas une fausse bonne idée, mais une vraie mauvaise idée - Courant Constructif Laboratoire d'idées, nous sommes un courant de pensée portant la vision de transition systémique la plus intégrée avec une source d'information la plus conséquente.

La #relocalisation de l' #industrie c'est non seulement notre ruine, mais également celle de nos futurs clients et de surcroît on sacrifie la #transitionécologique à grands coups de #dette souveraine au détriment de la #transitionsociétale.

#économie #politique

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Just out!

I was honoured to be invited to contribute to this amazing book from #Permaculture Press w @rupertread.bsky.social and others


shop.permaculture.co.uk/products/tra...

#transformativeadaptation #TrAd #ClimateAdaptation #solutions #community #relocalisation #permacultureliving

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Transformative Adaptation – published November 2024 Transformative Adaptation (TrAd) works with, not against nature. It reduces emissions while guarding us against those impacts. This helps transform our civilisation to be in readiness and in the direc...

Today is Publication Day for this amazing book (I contributed a tiny bit. The bulk of the work was by Rupert, Morgan and Maddy)

shop.permaculture.co.uk/products/tra...

#transformativeadaptation #TrAd #ClimateAdaptation #solutions #community #relocalisation #permaculture #permacultureliving

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Bonne nouvelle, les prix du Volvo EX30 ne devraient pas augmenter grâce à cette astucieuse décision Volvo, du fait de sa filiation avec le chinois Geely, fabrique son petit SUV électrique, l'EX30, en Chine. De ce fait, les voitures destinées au marché

Bonne nouvelle, les prix du Volvo EX30 ne devraient pas augmenter grâce à cette astucieuse décision www.frandroid.com/marques/volv... via @frandroid.com
#Volvo #EX30 #VolvoEX30 #SUV #Electrique #Relocalisation #Production #Tarifs #Stables #VoitureElectrique #BEV #EV #VE

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Résumons
#Sanofi a
➡️touché plus d'1,5 Md € de CIR en 13 ans
➡️été soutenu par la BCE, le plan #Relocalisation

Mais, après avoir versé 14 Mds € aux actionnaires en 3 ans,
Sanofi décide de se séparer de son pôle de santé grand public pour augmenter sa rentabilité financière

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#relocalisation #réindustrialisation #MadeInFrance
#PrimaireSocialeUNSA

x.com/UNSA_officiel/…

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La quête d’une souveraineté sanitaire : épisode 2/4 du podcast Le prix de la santé | Radio France AUDIO • Le prix de la santé, épisode 2/4 : La quête d’une souveraineté sanitaire. Une série inédite proposée par France Culture. Écoutez Entendez-vous l'éco ?, et découvrez nos podcasts en ligne.

🎙️"La quête d’une souveraineté sanitaire", El Mouhoub Mouhoud, professeur d'économie à @Paris_Dauphine était l'invité d'#entendezvousleco.
Emission à écouter ou ré-écouter sur 👉#mondialisation #covid_19 #dépendance #relocalisation

x.com/tiphainederock… franceculture.fr/emissions/ente…

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Sinon, le #CETA On peut l'annuler maintenant ? Et le #Mercosur, tous ces traités commerciaux internationaux, sont toujours dans les tuyaux @EmmanuelMacron ?
#Relocalisation

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La #relocalisation de la #production des pays #lowcost vers la France est aussi possible: #volonté #politique. #industrie #madeinfrance

x.com/ulyssepariser/…

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#relocalisation #réfugiés #UE au 25/01/2016 : 257 depuis l'Italie (19 en France), 157 depuis la Grèce (43 en FRance)

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Crise migratoire : députés UE font le point avec le Commissaire Avramopoulos #frontières #Schengen #relocalisation

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