Building Bridges Across the Mediterranean: A New Era of Regional Collaboration
The Action Committee for the Mediterranean (ACM) is preparing for its official launch in Spring 2025 in Malaga, Spain, and with it, a call to reimagine the region’s future—not through the lens of political polarization, but through the undeniable ties of demographics, interdependence, and shared interest.
Moving Beyond Politics
As anti-immigration rhetoric intensifies in the North and anti-Western sentiments rise in the South, ACM emphasizes a different story—one that unfolds beneath the political surface. Demographic shifts are fundamentally reshaping the region. Aging populations in Europe increasingly depend on the vitality and talent of the younger generation in the South, while countries in the South benefit from northern investment, knowledge exchange, and industrial cooperation.
This evolving interdependence is not a challenge to manage, but a foundation to build on. ACM believes that where politics divides, reality unites.
Turning Challenges into Shared Opportunities
The committee identifies key issues that require a coordinated, regional response:
Stabilizing the region
Adapting to demographic change
Aligning labor markets
Creating cross-border value chains in industry and services
Addressing climate change and food security
Improving cultural integration
Crafting a common narrative for the region
These aren’t just problems to be solved—they’re opportunities to shape a common Mediterranean destiny.
A New Model for Regional Collaboration
ACM’s method is based on inclusivity, collaboration, and continuity:
Inclusivity: Engaging economists, academics, civil society, and institutional partners from across the Mediterranean.
Collaboration: Hosting informal, discreet annual forums to encourage real conversation and solution-focused action.
Continuity: Producing actionable reports and white papers through a permanent secretariat and ensuring sustained follow-up.
Founders Hakim El Karoui and Marc Reverdin, along with a diverse executive board, are already driving this vision forward. The committee’s inaugural Mediterranean Demographics Report will set the tone for future work, offering data-driven insight into the forces shaping the region.
Join the Effort
ACM is now building a network of experts and Mediterranean organizations—from think tanks and academic institutions to private sector leaders. Their goal is clear: turn shared challenges into shared solutions through action, not rhetoric.
More information and opportunities to collaborate are available at: action-med.org